Polemia Foundation, a think tank monitoring the French media for fake news stories, has awarded France 2 one of its Bobards d'Or ('Golden Hoax') awards for last year's story about Putin, Sputnik France has reported.
The television channel got in trouble last August after creating a dubious description of the Russian president's vacation activities, posting a photo of Putin with a tranquilised tiger in Siberia and implying that he had hunted it down and killed it. In fact, the photo was taken in August 2008, while Putin was Russia's prime minister, during his visit to the Ussurisky nature reserve in the Russian Far East. Putin was in the region to raise public awareness about the need to protect endangered species, and helped fit the tiger in the photo with a GPS tracker.
The lavish Bobards d'Or ceremony, held on Monday at Paris's Theatre du Gymnase Marie Bell, featured all the trimmings of a real awards show, including little golden statuettes of Pinocchio modelled after the Oscars.
Et aux @bobardsdor le public vote… belle ambiance!!
— Thierry MARIANI (@ThierryMARIANI) 18 февраля 2019 г.
Bobards d’Or international gagné par @France2tv et son reportage bidon sur #Poutine chasseur de tigres….alors que les images étaient au contraire issues d’une campagne pour protéger le tigre pic.twitter.com/rp4qL4W2j4
Tweet reads: "Voting on the Bobards d'Or. A great atmosphere! The International Bobard d'Or was won by France 2 for its phony report on 'Putin the Tiger Hunter'…while the images were really from a campaign to protect tigers."
In addition to France 2, Bobards d'Or were handed out to political commentator Clement Viktorovitch for alleged attempts to fiddle with the figures about how many migrants were coming to France each year, and a 'Yellow Vest hoax' award to journalist Thomas Boulouque, who sparked controversy after misidentifying the flag of Picardy for a French royalist flag, which he implied was a sign that the Yellow Vest protests had been 'infiltrated' by right-wing groups.
The Bobards d'Or ceremony was launched in 2010 at the initiative of the Polemia Foundation. Since then, French media have accumulated a host of the parody awards for erroneous reporting.