Few people claim to despise 'fake news' more than President Donald Trump. He has angrily tweeted the phrase 17 times accusing the media of spreading lies.

But on Thursday, the commander and chief shared a fictitious Albawaba story saying Kuwait issued its own 'Trump-esque' visa ban.

It has not yet been removed from Trump's official Facebook page though it has been proven fake. Almost 70,000 people have shared the post from his page.

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Smart!: President Trump's official Facebook page shared this false Albawaba story Thursday

Th Kuwait visa story Trump shared has been denounced as false by multiple governments

The false report says Kuwait will ban citizens from five Muslim majority countries from obtaining visas. Specifically, it claims: Syrians, Iraqis, Iranians, Pakistanis and Afghans will not be able to obtain visit or trade Kuwaiti visas.

Kuwait News Agency KUNA said the foreign ministry 'categorically denied media reports that is planned to stop entry visas for some nationalities.'

It also said the ministry does not believe person's nationality or faith is linked to terrorism or violence. The story has also been denounced by multiple governments.

Also, Albawaba story uses anonymous sources, which is something Trump abhors.

Kuwait News Agency said the article Trump shared on Facebook was fake news

Are we living in Nazi Germany?: Trump compared the spreading of fake news to Hitler's regime

Trump has tweeted the phrase 'fake news' 17 times. He has accused major media outlets such as CNN and the New York Times of spreading false information

Trump shared a story that only cited fake sourced on Thursday. It was proven to be fake news

President Trump has criticized negative articles about him using unnamed sources. In September, he tweeted: 'Remember, don't believe "sources said" by the VERY dishonest media. If they don't name the sources, the sources don't exist.'

When Trump first shared the article, Russia state media Sputnik News posted the information writing 'Kuwait has ripped a page from the playbook of U.S. President Donald Trump.'

But later, CNN reports the website corrected the article saying: 'The following news article proved to be untrue.'

One of Trump's favorite news outlets reported on the fake news as well. Breitbart ran the story with the lede: 'Radical Islamic terrorism concerns have reportedly prompted Kuwait to suspend the issuance of visas for citizens of five fellow Muslim-majority countries.'

However, the reporter notes later in article that the Kuwait foreign ministry denied the news.

The Albawaba article has yet to be flagged by Facebook with a warning label to say that it is 'disputed by 3rd Party Fact-Checkers.'

Facebook cracked down on fake news stories because of the numerous salaciously false stories spread before the election.

It is not clear if the president shared the article himself or if it was posted by someone on his staff.

Trump supporters continue to like and share the disproven information on his Facebook page. The top comment on his post is: 'Donald Trump is already one of the best Presidents in US History!'