Misleading videos claim to show celebrations from inside Venezuelapublished at 13:26 GMT

13:26 GMT

Shayan Sardarizadeh
BBC Verify senior journalist

A number of misleading videos have been posted online claiming to show people flooding the streets in Caracas, waving flags and dancing in celebration after the US seized President Nicolás Maduro.

While many celebrations did break out this weekend over Maduro’s deposition, they were in Latin American countries such as Argentina and Chile, and other countries with Venezuelan diaspora such as Spain and the US.

We have not seen visual evidence of large celebrations inside Venezuela so far.

But a video shared on X by right-wing conspiracy theorist Alex Jones claims to show people on the streets of Caracas this weekend. It has been viewed more than two million times and shows an aerial shot of a large crowd with vehicles attempting to move through it.

Jones claimed: “Millions of Venezuelans flooded the streets of Caracas and other major cities in celebration of the ouster of Communist dictator Nicholas Maduro.”

However, by reverse searching frames from the video and finding the original version, we were able to confirm that it instead shows opposition protests in Caracas in July 2024 after Maduro’s disputed presidential win.

A screenshot from the misleading video alongside a picture of its real location in Florida on Google Maps

Another post by a pro-Trump journalist that has been viewed nearly four million times shows a group of people with Venezuelan flags dancing to music. “World Cup style celebrations are erupting all across Venezuela,” the user said.

While the video is recent, by checking the details in the background and corroborating it with other videos of the same event, we confirmed that it was actually filmed at a Chevron petrol station in Doral, Florida, which is home to a large number of Venezuelan-Americans.

A similar video claimed to show a jubilant crowd in Venezuela, but by checking the landmarks seen in the clip we confirmed that it was instead filmed in Panama City.

One Venezuelan who lives in the UK told the BBC that people inside the country were “very quiet” about Maduro’s seizure because they couldn’t “freely voice our feelings about what has happened”.