Earlier this year, we documented how WorldNetDaily had to walk back articles by reporter Leo Hohmann falsely claiming that Chobani Yogurt founder Hamdi Ulukaya explicitly called for employers to hire more Mulsim refugees and a suggestion that Chobani prefers Muslim refugees over other workers at a plant in Idaho.
Apparently, WND didn’t learn its lesson, because it was at it again. An anonymously written Nov. 14 article — though one can probably assume it was written by Hohmann — carried the headline “U.S. yogurt billionaire expands plant to hire more foreign refugees.” The article complained that “Chobani Yogurt, the world’s largest yogurt company, which relies heavily on imported refugee labor, is investing $20 million to expand its plant in Twin Falls, Idaho.” The article includes quotes from Ulukaya, but nothing that explicitly states he was expanding the plant solely to hire more “foreign refugees.”
For Hohmann’s and WND’s purposes, “foreign refugees” means “Muslim refugees.” This is made clearer later in the article by stating that “Chobani’s welcoming of refugees in Idaho also has taken a darker turn, however, prompting calls to boycott the yogurt giant after a spike in violent crimes perpetrated by Muslim refugees.”
But Chobani is not afraid to sue, or threaten to sue, those who tell lies about it — just ask Alex Jones — and it appears that has happened again at WND, because some undisclosed editing has taken place on this article
By Nov. 17, he headline of the article had been shortened to “U.S. yogurt billionaire expands plant” and a statement later in the article referencing “criticism that Chobani’s drive for cheap labor and the refugee resettlement there were to blame for the string of horrific crimes” in Idaho has been removed, while a statement that “none [of the crimes] have been connected to any Chobani employee” had been added.
Also deleted was a claim that “The influx of refugees has also caused the number of active TB cases in Twin Falls to spike by 500 percent between 2011 and 2012, according to Breitbart News.” That’s highly misleading, because as even Breitbart admits, the actual number of cases increased from one to six; the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare has added that none of the cases were infectious and have been treated, and that none of the TB cases being treated in the state in 2016 involved refugees.
Despite these arguably significant changes, the article has not been flagged as updated or corrected.
It’s a shame — and a sad commentary on the state of fact-checking and journalism in general at WND — that Chobani apparently has to threaten legal action against WND in order to get reported on fairly and accurately.