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Re: أعملوا حسابكم أنتقام الجندر بدا في الخرطو (Re: نعمات عماد)
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الموضوع كله خبر كاذب تم نشره في النت عام 2012. الخبر الكاذب يقول أن الجريمة(نعم جريمة) حدثت في بولندا. تم التحقيق في الخبر و أتضح إنه كاذب و ملفق بعناية. https://eu.dental-tribune.com/news/https://eu.dental-tribune.com/news/
The story about a vengeful dentist from Poland was picked up by numerous international media, including Dental Tribune Online. Meanwhile, it has turned out to be untrue. (Image courtesy of a2bb5s/shutterstock) Hoax: Polish dentist did not pull out ex-boyfriend’s teeth Back to news Europe By Dental Tribune International May 14, 2012 WROCŁAW, Poland: The story about a Polish dentist who removed all of her ex-partner’s teeth in an act of revenge has been found not to be true. Two weeks ago, several international media reported the incident, which had allegedly taken place in the Polish town of Wrocław. The story about 34-year-old Anna Maćkowiak who performed the surgery on her ex-boyfriend after he had dumped her for another woman made it around the world. Forty-five-year-old Marek Olszewski had asked the dentist for treatment because he was suffering from severe toothache. His ex-partner gave him a high dose of anaesthetic and when he woke up all his teeth had been removed.
When an editor of the US news website msnbc.com investigated the story last week, she found that the police in Wrocław had never heard of such an incident. “Lower Silesia Police Department has not been notified about such an event and is not investigating such a case,” the editor wrote with regard to a statement from Pawel Petrykowski of the provincial police headquarters in Wrocław.
The editor also found that Poland’s Chamber of Physicians and Dentists, which handles disciplinary matters, is not investigating and never has investigated any such case. Furthermore, the source stated that a dental practitioner named Anna Maćkowiak is not even listed in Poland’s central register of dentists.
According to the msnbc report, the story, which was shared on Facebook more than 75,000 times, originated from the British newspaper the Daily Mail. However, the responsible editor Simon Tomlinson, under whose name the article had appeared, was not able to give the investigating US editor any details. “I’ve drawn a bit of a blank. The [Daily] Mail Foreign Service, which did the piece for the paper, is really just an umbrella term for copy put together from agencies. My news desk isn’t sure where exactly it came from,” Tomlinson told msnbc in an e-mail.
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