The channel showed a childhood picture of ‘Trump in Pakistan’ (Picture: Neo News)

He spent years trying to convince the world that Barack Obama wasn’t actually a US citizen.

But now Donald Trump might have to deliver his own proof that he isn’t an orphan from Pakistan.

Yes, really.

Nigel Farage is the first British politician to meet Trump since the election

Taking to thousands of television sets, Neo News alleges that blonde-haired Trump was actually born in Waziristan in 1946 as Dawood Ibrahim Khan.


They then went on to add that Trump lived there until 1955 when he was adopted by his American family following the reported death of his Pakistani parents.

The channel also showed a childhood picture of ‘Trump in Pakistan’ and claimed he received his childhood education in the country.

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video

The basis of the story was a tweet, in which a man claimed Trump was born to a Muslim family

The report claims that he was adopted by his American family following the reported death of his Pakistani parents (Picture: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

In the report, which took place last month, the reporter said: ‘Presidential candidate Donald Trump was born in Pakistan and not in America.’



They also added in a disclaimed that they were not the original source of the story.

In fact, a tweet they had received was the basis, in which a man claimed Trump was born to a Muslim family.

But by airing it, they were hit with a huge amount of backlash from locals asking how a ‘reputable news outlet’ could put something like this out as ‘fact’.

Although we’re pretty sure it’s not true, if Trump was actually born in Pakistan, it would be slightly awkward considering the five years he spent trying to ‘prove’ President Barack Obama was born in Kenya. Even though he wasn’t.

In fact, it wasn’t until September that he abandoned the movement and admitted ‘Obama was born in the United States’ during a speech in Washington.

He didn’t, however, apologise for his leading role in the birther movement.

Instead, he dismissed criticism and said: ‘I was pretty confident about where I was born’.

Metro.co.uk has contacted Donald Trump for comment.