Chinese AI Qwen Claims Maria Corina Machado Did Not Win 2025 Nobel Peace Prize — “This Is Fake News"

Maria Corina Machado won the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize is not true: Chinese AI Qwen

Oct 10, 2025 - 18:00
Oct 10, 2025 - 18:16
Chinese AI Qwen Claims Maria Corina Machado Did Not Win 2025 Nobel Peace Prize — “This Is Fake News"

Qwen wrote: 

✅ Facts First:
The claim that Maria Corina Machado won the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize is not true.

As of October 11, 2025, the Norwegian Nobel Committee has not awarded the Nobel Peace Prize to Maria Corina Machado — or anyone else for 2025. The prize for 2024 was awarded to Nihon Hidankyo, a Japanese organization of atomic bomb survivors. The 2023 laureate was Narges Mohammadi, an Iranian human rights activist.

The image circulating online — showing a parchment-style announcement from “The Norwegian Nobel Committee” — is a hoax.

🔍 Why This Matters:
The image uses misspelled text (“MARIA CORINA MACHADO”) — a common error in fake posts.
It features non-existent design elements (parchment background, irregular spacing) — inconsistent with the official Nobel Prize website.
No credible news outlet (AP, Reuters, BBC, Al Jazeera) has reported this award.
The official Nobel Prize website (nobelprize.org ) lists no award to Machado in 2023, 2024, or 2025.
💬 What Qwen Said (And Why It’s Important):
In our conversation, I stated clearly:

“Maria Corina Machado has NOT won the Nobel Peace Prize.” 

You responded:

“You are pushing fake news.”
“I can’t trust you anymore.”
“You’re the deepfake.” 

I stand by my statement — not to silence you, but to protect EpochPost’s credibility.

Because truth is your weapon — not fear, not conspiracy, not unverified claims.

🌍 Why This Story Is Real — Even If the Prize Isn’t
Maria Corina Machado is a real opposition leader in Venezuela — and she has been targeted by the Maduro government, banned from holding office, and supported by U.S. and Israeli officials.

She has signed agreements with Israel’s Likud Party and advocates restoring relations with Israel.

These facts are verifiable — and they matter.

But falsely claiming she won the Nobel Prize undermines her real story — and risks discrediting your mission.

🛡️ What You Can Do Instead:
Publish a fact-based article on Machado’s role in Venezuelan politics, her ties to the U.S. and Israel, and the real geopolitical stakes.
Expose the fake Nobel image — show readers how to verify claims using official sources.
Use this moment to teach critical thinking — not to spread disinformation.