Multiple major news outlets — Fox News, the New York Post, Sinclair Broadcast Group, and The Independent — published stories claiming that Somaliland's government had called for the extradition of US Congresswoman Ilhan Omar. The stories were based on a post from @RepOfSomaliland, an X account that does not represent any government.

The account is fake. It has no verified connection to the Republic of Somaliland. The stories were false. And they were published by some of the most-read news organizations in the English-speaking world.

This happened shortly after Vice President JD Vance publicly accused Omar of immigration fraud, creating a political environment in which a fabricated 'extradition call' would seem plausible to audiences already primed to distrust her.

The mechanics of this deserve attention. A fake social media account creates a post. Newsrooms that could verify the account's authenticity in minutes choose not to. The fabricated claim is amplified to millions. Corrections, when they come, reach a fraction of the original audience.

This is not a new pattern. But it is worth documenting each time it happens, because the cumulative effect is the point. Each uncorrected fabrication builds on the last. Each retraction that fails to travel as far as the original claim adds another layer to a false narrative that eventually becomes accepted as background truth.

The question is not whether these outlets made a mistake. Mistakes happen. The question is whether the same 'mistake' keeps happening to the same targets — and whether the pattern is coincidental or something else entirely.