Facebook said it took down a contingent of groups, pages, and accounts attempting to artificially boost certain ideas in the Middle East.
The group included 259 Facebook accounts, 102 Facebook Pages, and five Facebook Groups and spent $167,000 on Facebook ads to boost their messages, the company said in a blog post. The accounts discussed “topics including alleged support of terrorist groups by Qatar and Turkey, Iran’s activity in Yemen, the conflict in Libya, successes of the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen, and independence for Somaliland.”
Facebook has been working to remove political messages that get a boost from people misidentifying themselves to prevent a repeat of the type of manipulation that occurred in the 2016 election campaign. The company said the activity it shut down was linked to two Middle East marketing firms—New Waves in Egypt and Newave in the UAE.
Since the 2016 presidential election, Facebook has removed numerous networks of coordinated accounts originating in countries including Russia and Iran. While these accounts tend to post content that is political or divisive in nature, Facebook maintains that it removes them for misleading others on the platform about their true identity—not for the content of their posts.
More must-read stories from Fortune:
—Q&A: Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella wants to conquer cloud gaming
—What CEOs, bankers, and tech execs think about a coming recession
—Facebook is working on sci-fi tech that would let users type with their minds
—Blockchain launches “fastest” crypto exchange in the world
—Apple is only paying thousands to squash its million-dollar bug problem
Catch up with Data Sheet, Fortune‘s daily digest on the business of tech.