- NEW DELHI — In the wake of the Indian armed forces' successful 'Operation
Sindoor', which targeted nine high-value terror sites in Pakistan and
Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK), the government's official fact-checking agency
has flagged a fabricated advisory falsely attributed to the Centre.
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- The fake advisory claimed that citizens had been urged to
remain calm and take precautionary steps such as storing non-perishable food,
medicines, and keeping emergency contacts handy amid an escalating situation
along the India-Pakistan border.
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- The advisory appeared to mirror civil defence protocols
but was not issued by any official agency.
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- "An image of an advisory is being shared online,
claiming that the government has urged individuals to take precautionary
measures and keep essential items ready at home. This claim is FAKE. The
government has not issued any such advisory," said the Press Information
Bureau (PIB) Fact Check division in a post on X.
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- It further urged citizens to "trust only official
government sources for credible information" and cautioned against
forwarding or sharing unverified claims.
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- Alongside fake advisories, a broader flood of
disinformation emerged from Pakistani media and government-linked social media
handles in the hours after the operation.
Read: India avenges Pahalgam attack; strikes 9 terror targets in Pakistan, PoK under Op Sindoor
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- Many of these platforms began circulating baseless
narratives alleging retaliatory attacks by Pakistan on Indian soil -- including
claims that the Pakistan Air Force had targeted Srinagar Airbase and destroyed
an Indian Army Brigade Headquarters.
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- These false claims were widely spread by high-profile
accounts affiliated with Pakistan's military media wing, the Inter-Services
Public Relations (ISPR), but failed to present any credible evidence, visual
proof, or satellite imagery to support the assertions.
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- "In a video shared by several pro-Pakistan handles,
it is being falsely claimed that the Pakistan Air Force has targeted Srinagar
airbase. The video shared is old and NOT from India. The video is from
sectarian clashes that took place in the year 2024 in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa,
Pakistan. Rely only on official Government of India sources for authentic
information," said PIB Fact Check in a separate post.
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- Another statement by the agency addressed a different
viral falsehood: "Social media posts falsely claim that Pakistan destroyed
Indian Brigade Headquarters. This claim is FAKE. Please avoid sharing
unverified information and rely only on official sources from the Government of
India for accurate information."
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- Fact-checkers and digital forensic teams found that several
photos and videos shared to support the disinformation were either digitally
manipulated or lifted from unrelated past incidents.
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- Despite the clear lack of authenticity, many of these
claims were amplified by sections of the mainstream Pakistani media.
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- The Indian government has urged citizens and the media to
rely solely on authenticated information issued by official sources.