Michel Collon is a Belgian writer, and journalist for the magazine of the Marxist Workers' Party of Belgium and for his own website Investig’Action.

Michel Collon
Michel Collon.
Born1946
Ixelles, Belgium
NationalityBelgian
Occupation(s)critic, journalist, publicist, writer

Biography edit

Michel Collon started his career in the Belgian weekly Solidaire. He continued his work independently by writing books, making films and an Internet newsletter broadcast to 40 000 subscribers.[citation needed] He is affiliated with the Workers Party of Belgium, and has organised a network of civil observers in Yugoslavia and in Iraq. He took part in the anti-imperialist conference Axis for Peace.[1]

Michel Collon denounced the misuse by Dalai Lama of a photograph that implied Chinese soldiers had dressed up as Buddhist monks and had provoked the 2008 Tibetan unrest.[2] According to the Los Angeles Times, this photograph was taken from the Michelle Yeoh film The Touch, which was filmed in Lhassa between 2001 & 2002.[3]

Propaganda disclosures edit

He built his reputation through the promotion of complotist and red-green-brown theories.[4][5][6][7]

Collon and some of his friends are also strong advocates of Eritrean president Isaias Afwerki.[citation needed]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Le colloque pour la paix dans le monde, les 17 et 18 novembre 2005, sur le site www.axisforpeace.net (page « Les participants ».
  2. ^ Published in Le Quotidien du peuple on 3 April 2008 : « Enquête sur une photo manipulée »
  3. ^ Photo of Chinese forces with monks' robes proves illusory
  4. ^ Christine Rousseau, TV – « Complotisme, les alibis de la terreur », Le Monde, 23 January 2018.
  5. ^ Marion David, J’ai discuté avec le père des « médiamensonges », L'Obs, January 1, 2016.
  6. ^ Catherine Gouëset, La Syrie, terre de mission des conspirationnistes, L'Express, 6 september 2013.
  7. ^ Marc Jacquemain and Jérôme Jamin, L’histoire que nous faisons - Contre les théories de la manipulation, Éditions du Centre d’Action Laïque, Bruxelles, 2008, pp. 33-34.

External links edit