Bangladesh’s General Elections are tomorrow, February 12. Social media, especially Facebook, has become a hotbed of disinformation. Fake quotes, doctored images, and misleading photocards are spreading fast. Many false claims try to anger voters or suggest foreign interference. AI-generated visuals add more confusion, showing fake meetings and conspiracy scenes. Experts warn this harms public opinion ahead of the vote. Dr Din M Sumon Rahman from ULAB said, "The main intention behind a disinformation campaign is to manipulate voting choice. Disinformation neatly feeds the confirmation bias of a decided voter’s choice." He added that swing voters are the main targets. Between mid-December 2025 and mid-January 2026, The Daily Star found 220 disinformation posts tied to political groups. Jamaat-i-Islami linked sources produced 96 posts, Awami League supporters 78, and BNP allies 38. These posts got over 2 million likes, comments, and shares in just 24 hours, with Jamaat-aligned posts drawing 90.68% of total engagement. Disinformation mainly targeted rival parties. Jamaat entities focused on BNP, calling them criminals. BNP groups hit back, accusing Jamaat of threatening Hindus. Awami League supporters targeted the interim government and student groups, spreading false stories like a civil war plot by Chief Adviser Dr Muhammad Yunus. Most fake posts were defamatory: 155 out of 220. Almost 90% of Jamaat’s defamation targeted BNP. BNP’s defamation went mostly against Jamaat. They traded claims of corruption and conspiracies, like fake smuggling schemes and secret deals with India. Content methods varied. Nearly 59% twisted facts into lies. Some used real information out of context, while others produced AI-made deepfakes and forged documents. Videos led the pack with 104 posts, followed by 44 photocards. Deepfakes numbered 58, mostly from Jamaat sources. The posts came from a monitored list of 615 Facebook pages known for spreading hate and fake stories. The list showed 27.4% were Awami League supporters, 25.57% Jamaat, and 14.5% BNP. This flood of fake news is seen as a deliberate move to manipulate votes and worsen party rivalries before the big day.