The Twitter account of seven-year-old Syrian girl Bana al-Abed, who became a symbol of the Syrian conflict, with some dubbing her the ‘Anne Frank of Syria,’ has fallen subject to suspicions over its authenticity.

#syria Bana al-Abed is filmed by her mother as they prepare to post on Twitter about life in #Aleppo on October 12 #AFP by @THAER__MOHAMEEDpic.twitter.com/85oTf5MEtS — AFP Photo Department (@AFPphoto) December 6, 2016

Bana’s account, which has been verified by Twitter, was set up three months ago, and has since gathered over 220,000 followers, along with global media coverage. The tweets, written by both Bana and her mother, Fatemah, depict life under siege in east Aleppo.

Our house and area fall to the army. We are trapped under bombs that didn't stop since last night. - Fatemah #Aleppo — Bana Alabed (@AlabedBana) December 7, 2016 We are sure the army is capturing us now. We will see each other another day dear world. Bye.- Fatemah #Aleppo — Bana Alabed (@AlabedBana) December 4, 2016

When the girl’s Twitter account was deactivated on Sunday, her supporters were distraught, believing she had been killed. The hashtag, #WhereIsBana was used as people hoped for good news.

#WhereisBana do hope that little Bana & her family are safe. Am sending love & prayers to you all. Such trauma for people of #Aleppo#Syria — The Grove (@thegroveleigh) December 6, 2016

However, the next day her account was re-activated and she tweeted that she was fine.

While many people have only fondness and concern for the Aleppo girl, to others, the account presents a number of questionable elements that some say point to a propaganda effort, pointing to videos where Bana appears to be reading from a prompt.

Such doubts aren’t unusual when such accounts emerge. In 2011, Amina Abdallah Arraf al Omari, who became famous for her “gay girl in Damascus” blog was revealed to be a hoax created by Tom MacMaster, an American man living in Edinburgh.

In January, an image reported as being a ‘before’ image of a starving Syrian child from the town of Madaya turned out to be an unrelated girl living in Lebanon. The White Helmets group have also been accused of being a propaganda tool.

As a result, questions have been raised as to Bana’s ability to timely hashtags and tweet in an area that doesn’t always have electricity or internet.

Within two days of setting up the account, she had used #HolocaustAleppo, #MassacreInAleppo, #StopAleppoMassacre and tweeted at Russian President Vladimir Putin, US President Barack Obama and Syrian President Bashar Assad.

The account says Bana’s mother, Fatemah, is a teacher and her father, Ghassan, works for the “legal department of the local council,” the Telegraph reports. For some, however, this isn’t enough, claiming Bana’s parents are jihadists who are using their daughter to further propaganda in their favor.

Some social media sleuths have raised questions over a picture shared byAmmar Jaber in which Bana is featured, as Jaber has also been photographed with Mahmoud Raslan, the photographer behind the Aleppo Boy image, which itself has been accused of being “war propaganda.”

READ MORE: Propaganda tool? China skeptical over images of Syrian boy as source denies ties with child-killers

Raslan, in turn, has been pictured with members of the Nour al-Din al-Zinki movement, who were recorded taunting a Palestinian child before they beheaded him.

READ MORE: US mulls ‘pause’ in support of Syrian rebels following beheading of Palestinian boy

News verification company Storyful has also made efforts to verify the account. “The mother, who says her name is Fatemah, has sent Storyful photos of her daughter, not pictured on the Twitter account,” Global News quoted Storyful.

“The photographs tally with the images shared on Twitter. Fatemah shared a photograph of her passport with Storyful, which corroborates her identity. The passport lists her birthplace as Aleppo,” Storyful said.

This isn’t enough for some, however, with a seemingly increasing number of people that have questioned the account’s authenticity claiming that they have been blocked, particularly after raising questions over whether the account was registered in the UK, although screenshots of such metadata can be altered.

As media reports about the ‘liberated’ rebel stronghold areas of Aleppo emerge, showing civilians fleeing and sharing accounts of rebels withholding supplies and shooting at civilians trying to leave through humanitarian corridors, Bana’s tweets appear to be at odds with these reports.