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A screenshot of an article, purportedly published by the news channel UP Tak, is going viral on social media.
The claim: The screenshot shows an article about a Hindu Dalit woman beheading six men in a temple in Uttar Pradesh's Babatpur (in Varanasi district) after she was threatened with rape and religious conversion.
Social media users are sharing the claim with the article's Hindi headline, which reads, "बलात्कार और धर्मांतरण की धमकी देने पर 6 मुस्लिम युवको का गला काट दलित हिंदू युवती फरार ; बाबतपुर स्थित काली मंदिर से 6 कटे सिर बरामद"
[Translation: A Hindu Dalit woman who is now absconding killed and beheaded six Muslim men after being threatened with rape and religious conversion; six heads were found in Babatpur's Kali temple.]
The claim is extremely viral on Facebook.
The Quint has received queries of the screenshot's verification on its WhatsApp tipline.
(Archives of more claims on social media can be seen here, here and here.)
Is it true?: No, no such incident took place.
A tweet from Varanasi police's DCP Gomti zone's account clarified that the "fake news" being shared was "completely false."
Neeraj Gupta, the cluster head for Tak Channels, told The Quint that UP Tak had not published this story "in any form."
How did we find out?: Using relevant keywords, we looked for news reports on the incident, but did not come across any reports of this kind.
However, it led us to a tweet shared by Varanasi police's Gomti zone Deputy Commissioner of Police's account, calling the incident "fake news."
It mentioned that the post was "fake news," calling it "completely false."
"No such incident has taken place in Babatpur, which is under Phulpur police station in Varanasi's Gomti zone. Varanasi police refutes this false claim," it read.
Did UP Tak publish this article?: We then looked for the article on UP Tak's website and social media accounts but found no sign of this report.
Even the website's archives did not have this report in its records.
The Quint reached out to Neeraj Gupta, the cluster head for Tak channels, who confirmed that UP Tak had not "done this (story) in any forms."
Conclusion: The viral screenshot in the claim is fake. UP Tak did not publish any such article, and the Varanasi police said that no such incident took place in their jurisdiction.
(With inputs from Piyush Rai.)
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