US President Barack
Obama's Facebook page has been swamped with comments from supporters of a
candidate in Egypt's presidential election.
It follows news that Hazem Abu Ismail may be barred from the poll because one of his parents held dual nationality.
Egypt's electoral commission has said Mr Abu Ismail's late mother became a naturalised US citizen in October 2006.
But his supporters are calling on Mr Obama to support their claim that the immigration paperwork is fraudulent.
Many of the postings are in Arabic, but one comment - posted
by several users - said in English: "His mother was a scholar in
America, she got American Green Card, but American Authorities are
trying to fraud that she was an American citizen."
Another user asked: "If the US administration has official documents, why not display them?"
'Plot'
Egypt's presidential election rules say that all candidates
must have been born in Egypt to Egyptian parents who have never held
citizenship of another country, are not dual nationals, and are not
married to a foreigner.
The head of the Higher Presidential Election Commission
(HPEC), Hatem Bajatu, said on Thursday that it had received information
that Mr Abu Ismail's mother had "used an American passport for travel to
and from Egypt" before her death and that it would notify the Salafist
preacher.
Mr Abu Ismail - who is running on on an ultra-conservative,
nationalist and anti-foreign intervention platform - subsequently told
his supporters that the allegations were a "plot" against him.
He said he had documents to prove his case and had hired American lawyers to help him.
The HPEC has said candidacy papers would be examined later
this week, after which those who did not meet the requirements would be
informed and allowed to appeal.
A final list of eligible candidates will be announced on 26 April.
'Flooded'
The White House has not commented on the matter, but tens of
thousands of angry messages from Mr Abu Ismail's supporters have been
added to President Obama's re-election campaign Facebook page.
They are attached to unrelated timeline updates posted in the
president's name including a video of the popstar Janelle Monae - an
Obama supporter - and a music playlist for his supporters.
The sheer number of posts are - at least temporarily -
preventing the Facebook "Wall" being used as a forum to generate support
for Mr Obama ahead of the US presidential vote on 6 November.
The Next Web news site
notes that this is not the first time that one of the president's
social media profiles has been "flooded with comments from another
country".
It says Chinese citizens began posting comments to his Google+ page after the network was unblocked in China in February.
This has continued ever since, with some recent posts attracting roughly as many Chinese language comments as English ones.
It prompted one user to write: "Dear Chinese mainlanders
spammers. Please respect the President of the United States of America
and quit spamming his post!"
BBC
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