Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap The WEF’s chairman is still alive and well, despite claims online !

The WEF’s chairman is still alive and well, despite claims online

Time:2024-05-01 05:40:34 source:World Warp news portal

CLAIM: World Economic Forum executive chairman Klaus Schwab was recently admitted to the hospital in serious condition and might have died.

AP’S ASSESSMENT: False. Posts making these allegations began spreading widely after a website that says it publishes “satire, and comedic opinion pieces and editorials” posted an article about Schwab’s supposed hospitalization. A WEF spokesperson told The Associated Press that the claims are untrue.

THE FACTS: Social media users are spreading baseless rumors about Schwab’s health.

“BREAKING: Klaus Schwab was apparently admitted to the hospital seriously ill,” reads one X post that had received approximately 25,000 likes and 8,800 shares as of Monday. “Anyway, that doesn’t BUG me.”

The word “bug” appears to be emphasized in reference to another false claim, that the WEF wants to replace meat with bugs.

Related information
  • G7 nations commit to phasing out coal by 2035 but give Japan some flexibility
  • Keleigh Teller shows off her figure in a fire
  • Dusty Baker wins Baseball Digest lifetime achievement award
  • Early voting begins for North Carolina primary runoff races
  • DAILY MAIL COMMENT: A very good day for our united kingdom
  • How Columbia's protest of the Israel
  • First cargo ship passes through newly opened channel in Baltimore
  • Here are 14 players to watch next season across the Atlantic Coast Conference
Recommended content
  • ‘Kraven the Hunter’ release delayed until December
  • Jodie Comer wows in shimmering black and white dress with cut
  • Putin announces plans to visit China in May
  • Nadal cruises to straight
  • Ahead of the Paris Olympics, police clear a migrant camp near City Hall
  • US to pull troops from Chad and Niger as the African nations question its counterterrorism role