Gazan Boy Found Alive. The Whistleblower Hoax That Fooled the World

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Sep 10, 2025

On July 28, a man named Anthony “Tony” Aguilar went on a small, YouTube-streamed Zoom call and, toward the end of an hourlong conversation, told a story that set the internet ablaze.

Aguilar, a former contractor with the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a U.S.- and Israel-backed aid organization, recounted a heart-wrenching incident that took place in May, in the early days of GHF’s operations: A Gazan boy he called Amir had walked 12 kilometers to reach the aid site, thanked Aguilar for the food, kissed his hand—and moments later, was gunned down by the IDF.

Within hours of the Zoom call’s publication, Quincy Institute co-founder Trita Parsi shared an excerpt of it on X. His accompanying post, which focuses on the plight of Amir and erroneously states the boy is five years old, has been viewed more than five million times. The story spread like wildfire.

Within a few days, international outlets turned social clips into news hits: France 24 aired an exclusive with Aguilar; Al Jazeera centered coverage on “Amir.” In the U.S., Tucker Carlson interviewed Aguilar on his show—twice in a single week; MSNBC’s weekend prime-time program aired the special report headlined “10-Year-Old Palestinian Boy ‘Gunned Down’ After Receiving Food Aid.” Aguilar even brought a printout of the boy’s photo to Capitol Hill to brief Senator Chris Van Hollen in person.

Before the basic facts of Aguilar’s sensational testimony could be verified, the narrative had been established: Israel murdered an innocent boy.

Through August, the tale metastasized across languages and platforms—TikTok edits, AI-generated cartoons, aggregator accounts—repeating the same beats: the arduous 12-kilometer walk, the hand kiss, the fatal shots.

Then the core claim collapsed. In Tanya Lukyanova's latest video report, she looks at how a lie spread around the world—and how it slowly unraveled.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6JlggjhHoJs

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