- Video falsely linked to IIOJK victims debunked.
- AI-generated photos misused in Pahalgam tragedy coverage.
- Victims’ identities distorted in viral social media posts.
As diplomatic tensions continue to rise between Pakistan and India following the deadly attack on tourists in Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK), a disturbing wave of misinformation and digitally manipulated content has emerged on Indian social media, much of it aiming to mislead, provoke, and obscure the truth.
The attack in Pahalgam, which claimed the lives of 26 tourists last month, has not only escalated geopolitical hostilities but also triggered a surge of viral fake news and artificial intelligence-generated imagery.
According to France 24 News, several widely circulated posts have wrongly identified victims and misrepresented events, fuelling confusion and further polarising audiences in India.
One such example is a widely shared video of a couple dancing in the Pahalgam valley, falsely claimed to be the final moments of the late Lieutenant Vinay Narwal and his wife. The video was picked up by multiple Indian news outlets and circulated extensively online.
However, the couple in the video, Ashish and Yashika Sehrawat, later came forward to clarify that the footage had no connection to the victims of the attack.
They addressed the issue via Instagram and shared the video’s metadata with AFP, confirming it was filmed about a week before the incident. Though they had posted it on the same day as the attack, the video was unrelated. Disturbed by the false associations, they deleted it from their account.
In addition to misleading video content, artificially generated images claiming to show victims and the aftermath of the tragedy have also gained traction.
France 24 News pointed out discrepancies in one such set of AI-generated photos showing bodies in a mountainous area, citing inconsistencies in proportions and facial features, including uneven nostrils and distorted background figures.
Reverse image searches yielded no source, and multiple AI detection tools confirmed the images were artificially created. Some versions of the images also displayed a Meta AI logo, though many circulating copies had the watermark cropped out.
Another widely shared pair of AI-generated images appeared to depict a grieving woman, identified online as the widow of Lieutenant Narwal. These visuals, which displayed an artificial, wax-like texture, were also confirmed through detection tools to be fully synthetic.
The images were based on a real photo being used in Indian media to represent the tragedy, but had been altered to produce stylised or enhanced versions.
France 24 News concluded that the use of AI-generated visuals and out-of-context media in connection with the Pahalgam attack is contributing to rising tensions between Pakistan and India, as misinformation continues to circulate across social networks in the wake of the tragedy.