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Security tightened at Odisha's Paradip port after arrival of ship with 21 Pakistani crew members

Security tightened at Odisha's Paradip port after arrival of ship with 21 Pakistani crew members

The Hindu14-05-2025

'The Odisha Police on Wednesday (May 14, 2025) beefed up security at port town Paradip after the arrival of a ship with 21 Pakistani crew members on board,' officials said.
'The 'MT Siren II' with a total of 25 crew members reached Paradip port early on Wednesday (May 14, 2025) from South Korea via Singapore, carrying crude oil for Indian Oil Corporation Limited,' they said.
India-Pakistan ceasefire LIVE updates: PM Modi chairs Cabinet Committee on Security meet
'Security arrangements have been tightened by Odisha Marine Police and the CISF after receiving information about the crew members from the Immigration Department,' said Marine Police Station inspector in-charge Babita Dehuri.
The Paradip port had been put on high alert in the wake of the military conflict between India and Pakistan. 'The ship is anchored at 'PM berth', located around 20 km from the shore, and has 11,350 metric tonnes of crude on board,' the officials said.
Operation Sindoor and India's response to Pakistan's retaliatory strikes: Before and after images of targets in Pakistan
'Orders have also been issued that no crew will be allowed to leave the ship during evacuation of the crude oil,' the police officer said.

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Congress leader Rajesh Soni arrested for Facebook posts on Operation Sindoor, booked under new BNS law

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Operation Sindoor focused solely on dismantling terrorist infrastructure, confirmed in a press conference by Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri, who clarified that India did not target civilian the scenes, India's cyber defence grid was activated, fact-checking units expanded, and social media protocols for military updates tightened. The government also advised citizens to avoid unverified content and rely only on official the misinformation torrent intensified, social media users increasingly turned to AI chatbots for verification, only to find more confusion and falsehoods. Platforms like xAI's Grok, OpenAI's ChatGPT, and Google's Gemini became common go-to tools for instant fact-checking amid the crisis.'Hey @Grok, is this true?' became a viral plea on Elon Musk's platform X, reflecting the surge in users seeking quick debunks. 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For instance, AFP fact-checkers in Uruguay asked Google's Gemini about an AI-generated image of a woman; it confirmed the image's authenticity but fabricated details about her identity and digital front of the India-Pakistan standoff reveals the complex landscape of modern warfare, where victory is measured not just in ground gained but in narrative despite the storm of falsehoods, India's response, though understated, was layered, methodical, and largely effective. As the lines between social media warfare and statecraft blur, it's clear that the next great conflict won't just be fought with missiles, but with memes, metadata, and misinformation.

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