Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Internet shutdown fuels Kashmir fake news battle

A COMMUNICATIONS blackout in Kashmir is fuelling a fake news war with Pakistan, as both sides unleash a deluge of disinformation to fill the vacuum and shape opinion.

India cut access to Kashmir's internet and phone lines in August as it sought to contain the fallout of its decision to revoke the region's autonomy.


The stripping of autonomy triggered fury in neighbouring Pakistan.

While landlines and mobile phones have since been restored, internet remains cut and foreign journalists have been unable to enter.

In the absence of real news from Kashmir, waves of false information have emerged online.

"Both sides are stoking tensions, and both sides benefit from the information vacuum to fill the void with their own narratives and push them to domestic and international audiences," said Jan Rydzak, who has researched related topics at Stanford University.

"Pakistan cannot afford to let (the Indian) government's 'business-as-usual' narrative flood its citizens' social media feeds; India cannot afford to let reports of mass incarceration and chaos flood theirs."

Disinformation has ranged from old photos from Gaza purportedly showing how India has turned Kashmir into a "living hell", to old images of happy children falsely claiming all is well in "the new Kashmir".

These have been identified by fact-checking unit, which has reported on dozens of pieces of Kashmir-related disinformation from both sides since the crisis began.

From India, media outlets with millions of Twitter or Facebook followers have shared manipulated or out-of-context photos and videos to paint a rosy picture of life in the Kashmir Valley.

The Eid al-Adha festival, a major religious holiday for Muslims, was an early battlefront in the fake news war, occurring about a week after Kashmir's autonomy was revoked.

In the regional capital of Srinagar on that day, a curfew was in place, thousands of extra troops patrolled the streets and its main mosque was ordered shut.

Online, however, images circulated widely alongside false claims they showed people praying at mosques in Srinagar.

In Pakistan, meanwhile, old, unrelated videos have been viewed millions of times in misleading posts about Kashmir shared by top politicians and journalists.

In one instance, a 2016 video showing a huge crowd at a funeral was posted on Twitter by cabinet minister Ali Haider Zaidi, who claimed it showed millions of people rallying against the revoking of autonomy.

Hamid Mir, a Pakistani journalist with more than five million followers on Twitter, also shared a video he claimed showed the Indian army using civilians as human shields but the footage was from 2018.

Mir deleted his tweet later after being called out on Twitter by fact-checkers.

For Mumbai-based investigative journalist Rana Ayyub, the disinformation on Indian social media is part of a concerted effort by authorities to obscure a true picture of the situation in Kashmir.

"The government is trying to counter this with misinformation showing misleading images to depict everything as normal," she told.

Ayyub said Indian authorities went further in accusing international media outlets "of spreading fake news" when they report accurately on the situation.

She referred to Indian authorities repeatedly denying there had been any major protests or violence in Srinagar, dismissing video reports by the BBC and other global news organisations as inaccurate.

However, authorities eventually admitted there had been "widespread unrest" in the city.

In Pakistan, the disinformation is driven partly by practical constraints due to a misplaced desire to draw attention to the issue, according to Shahzad Ahamd, a digital rights activist at Islamabad-based NGO Byte for All.

"People are using old images and videos to highlight the plight of Kashmiris," Ahamd told, but added the strategy was backfiring.

"Fake news is not helping, rather it has clouded the actual human misery there."

Rydzak, most recently a scholar at Stanford University's Global Digital Policy Incubator, said there were no winners in the fake-news war.

"We don't know exactly how the circulation of information has changed as a result of this 'digital siege', but it has made the task of verifying and debunking rumours harder to fulfil and the overall situation harder to control," he said.

(AFP)

More For You

british-steel-iStock
An aerial view of Steel Plant Industry in Scunthorpe. (Photo: iStock)

Government takes control of British Steel under emergency law

THE UK government has taken control of British Steel after passing emergency legislation to stop the closure of the country’s last factory capable of producing steel from raw materials.

The plant, owned by Chinese company Jingye, was facing imminent shutdown. Prime minister Keir Starmer said the government "stepped in to save British Steel" to prevent its blast furnaces from going out.

Keep ReadingShow less
Two men jailed for life for Aurman Singh’s murder
Aurman Singh

Two men jailed for life for Aurman Singh’s murder

TWO men have been sentenced to life imprisonment for the brutal murder of delivery driver Aurman Singh, who was attacked while delivering parcels in Shrewsbury two years ago.

Mehakdeep Singh, 24, and Sehajpal Singh, 26, both formerly of Tipton in the West Midlands, were ordered to serve a minimum of 28 years each after being found guilty at Stafford Crown Court on Friday (11).

Keep ReadingShow less
Steel tycoon accused of diverting millions to family while bankrupt

Pramod Mittal

Steel tycoon accused of diverting millions to family while bankrupt

A STEEL magnate who holds the dubious title of Britain's biggest bankrupt has been accused of secretly channelling £63 million to his family instead of settling business debts.

Pramod Mittal, 68, who lives in Mayfair, is being sued at London's High Court by his former company Global Steel Holdings.

Keep ReadingShow less
Akshay Kumar tells King Charles to watch Kesari 2: “You’ll know why the British should say sorry”

Akshay Kumar urges King Charles to watch Kesari 2

Instagram/DharmaProductions

Akshay Kumar tells King Charles to watch Kesari 2: “You’ll know why the British should say sorry”

Akshay Kumar isn’t asking for an apology. He just wants the British to look back and really see what happened. With his upcoming film Kesari Chapter 2 hitting screens on April 18, the actor is urging both the UK government and King Charles to watch the film and confront a dark chapter in colonial history.

The film, directed by Karan Singh Tyagi and based on The Case That Shook the Empire by Raghu and Pushpa Palat, tells the story of C. Sankaran Nair, a Malayali lawyer who took legal action against General Dyer and the British government after the Jallianwala Bagh massacre of 1919. The massacre when British troops opened fire on a peaceful crowd remains one of the most horrific events of British rule in India.

Keep ReadingShow less
Rare sitting in parliament to 'protect' British Steel

Prime minister Sir Keir Starmer holds a press conference on nationalising British Steel, at Downing Street on April 11, 2025 in London, Britain. Carl Court/Pool via REUTERS

Rare sitting in parliament to 'protect' British Steel

THE government has recalled parliament this weekend aiming to pass emergency legislation to "take control" of a struggling British Steel plant, prime minister Keir Starmer said.

MPs will join a rare Saturday (12) sitting to discuss the draft bill which would allow the Labour administration to take measures to prevent the plant's imminent closure with thousands of jobs at stake.

Keep ReadingShow less