logo
Pakistani celebrities' social media accounts geo-blocked again in India

Pakistani celebrities' social media accounts geo-blocked again in India

The Hindu6 hours ago
The social media accounts of several Pakistani celebrities were geo-blocked again on Thursday (July 3, 2025), hours after they became briefly accessible to users in India — a development that had triggered sharp reactions across social media platforms.
Some of the previously restricted profiles became visible on Wednesday (July 2, 2025), reportedly due to a technical glitch. However, following the issue being brought to the attention of the authorities, the content was once again geo-restricted and is no longer accessible in India.
In the wake of the recent terrorist attack in Pahalgam, the Union Ministry of Home Affairs had recommended the blocking of 16 YouTube channels based in Pakistan. These were accused of disseminating provocative and communally sensitive content, false narratives, and misinformation targeting India, its armed forces, and security agencies.
The list of banned YouTube channels includes prominent media outlets such as Dawn News, ARY News, Samaa TV, Bol News, and Geo News, along with other channels such as Irshad Bhatti, Raftar, The Pakistan Reference, Samaa Sports, GNN, Uzair Cricket, Umar Cheema Exclusive, Asma Shirazi, Muneeb Farooq, Suno News, and Raazi Naama.
In addition, the social media profiles of Pakistani public figures — including actors Mahira Khan, Saba Qamar, Ahad Raza Mir, Danish Taimoor, Yumna Zaidi, Fawad Khan, Mawra Hocane, and Hania Aamir — as well as cricketers such as Shahid Afridi, Babar Azam, Mohammad Rizwan, Wasim Akram, Shan Masood, Hasan Ali, Naseem Shah, Imam-ul-Haq, Shadab Khan, and Shoaib Akhtar — remain geo-blocked in India.
Further, the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting had issued an advisory to over-the-top (OTT) platforms, media streaming services, and digital intermediaries in India, instructing them to discontinue web series, films, songs, podcasts, and other forms of media content originating from Pakistan.
The advisory cited national security considerations, stating, 'Several terrorist attacks in India have been established to have cross-border linkages with Pakistan-based state and non-state actors... On April 22, the terrorist attack in Pahalgam led to the killing of several Indians, one Nepali citizen, and injuries to a number of others...'.
Quoting Part III of the Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021, the Ministry underscored the responsibilities of content publishers on OTT platforms. It also referenced Rule 3(1)(b) of Part II of the IT Rules, 2021, which stipulates that intermediaries must ensure that users do not upload or share content that 'threatens the unity, integrity, defence, security or sovereignty of India, friendly relations with foreign States, or public order'.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How India's BrahMos Strike On Nur Khan Airbase Brought Pakistan To The Brink
How India's BrahMos Strike On Nur Khan Airbase Brought Pakistan To The Brink

India.com

timean hour ago

  • India.com

How India's BrahMos Strike On Nur Khan Airbase Brought Pakistan To The Brink

New Delhi: A single missile. Thirty seconds. That is all Pakistan had when India's BrahMos slammed into the Nur Khan Airbase – just minutes from Islamabad. No early warning. No clear warhead signature. No time to guess whether it carried a conventional payload or a nuclear one. Rana Sanaullah Khan, special assistant to Pakistan's Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif, went public. He said that 30-second window nearly sparked a nuclear chain reaction. His words were not laced with bravado. They carried the tremor of a nation that found itself facing the unthinkable. "The Pakistani government had just 30-45 seconds to analyse whether the missile has any atomic payload. To make such a decision in just 30 seconds is a dangerous thing," Khan said during a televised interview. When India launched that BrahMos – what Khan mistakenly called 'Harmus' – the Pakistani high command scrambled. Inside Nur Khan, alarms rang. Pilots rushed to cockpits. Radar units lit up. In war rooms, generals debated retaliation. But the warhead was non-nuclear. Delhi was not pressing the red button yet. Still, that moment tore open Islamabad's biggest fear – a precise and rapid Indian strike that could knock out critical nodes before Pakistan had time to retaliate. Nur Khan is not any airbase. It lies inside a dense military ecosystem – adjacent to VIP terminals, near Islamabad's civilian airport and dangerously close to Pakistan's nuclear brain – the Strategic Plans Division. That division does not just manage warheads. It plans for survival. It monitors threats. It guards command centres. A hit this close, even with a conventional weapon, rattled nerves at the very top. Khan, in a recent interview, said U.S. President Donald Trump helped stop it from spiraling. He credits the former him with stepping in, easing tensions and pulling the region back from the edge. India has pushed back on that narrative. Officials say it was Pakistan's own DGMO who reached out first desperate to avoid escalation after the BrahMos strike exposed their air defenses. That night, Indian jets, apart from Nur Khan, targeted other airbases too. Runways were cratered. Refueling assets were disabled. By morning, Islamabad had lost air dominance over key northern sectors. And with each passing hour, Pakistan's retaliatory options narrowed. The Nur Khan base, once RAF Station Chaklala, has long been a high-value asset. It hosts Pakistan's key transport squadrons, refueling aircraft and serves as the main VIP air terminal for military brass and state leaders. More importantly, it is nestled in the shadow of Islamabad's strategic district where the lines between civilian governance and nuclear command blur. The base is also less than a dozen kilometers from what many believe are Pakistan's forward nuclear storage units. According to reports by The New York Times and other Western intelligence sources, Nur Khan base is critical to Pakistan's nuclear deployment network. That is what made the BrahMos impact so dangerous. It was not only a hole in a tarmac. It was a message – a demonstration of India's reach, precision and willingness to target assets deep inside enemy territory. Pakistan, which maintains a policy of ambiguity over its nuclear doctrine, had to read between the lines. Was this a decapitation attempt? A soft warning? Or a trial run for a bigger operation? Khan's admission changes the narrative. For the first time, a sitting Pakistani official has acknowledged how close the country came to misreading India's intent and launching something far more devastating in response. This was a moment where miscalculation could have meant mushroom clouds. India's no-first-use doctrine remains intact. But New Delhi has redefined how conventional superiority can be used for coercive diplomacy. A strike like Nur Khan is a geopolitical signal. As for Trump, Pakistan's Field Marshal Asim Munir has already floated the idea of a Nobel Peace Prize for him. That may be diplomatic theatre. But it also shows how rattled Rawalpindi was and how badly they wanted to de-escalate without looking weak. Today, Nur Khan base still stands. But its scars run deeper than concrete. They live in the brief seconds when Pakistan's leadership stared into the nuclear abyss and waited.

MPs Seek Crackdown On Digital Arrest Scams At MHA Panel Meet On Rising Cyber Fraud
MPs Seek Crackdown On Digital Arrest Scams At MHA Panel Meet On Rising Cyber Fraud

News18

time3 hours ago

  • News18

MPs Seek Crackdown On Digital Arrest Scams At MHA Panel Meet On Rising Cyber Fraud

Last Updated: The Financial Intelligence Unit-India raised concerns over the alarming increase in cyber-enabled financial fraud, many involving mule accounts Digital arrest scams were a focal point during the discussion on cyber fraud by the standing committee for the ministry of home affairs, which met on Thursday to look into strategies to tackle such challenges. Representatives from the ministry of corporate affairs, as well as central probe agencies like CBI and NIA also appeared before the committee chaired by BJP MP Radha Mohan Das Agarwal. The Financial Intelligence Unit-India (FIU-IND) raised concerns over the alarming increase in cyber-enabled financial frauds, many involving mule accounts – bank accounts operated by frauds but registered under the names of unsuspecting or complicit individuals. According to government data, India witnessed a 21-fold increase in such cases in 2024 as compared to 2022. In the first two months of 2025 alone, 17,768 cases of digital arrest were reported with financial losses exceeding Rs 210 crore; the total damage from this fraud has now surpassed Rs 2,000 crore. Prime Minister Narendra Modi recently warned the public about digital arrest. Experts and citizens, however, have questioned the lack of widespread public awareness campaigns. WHAT DOES CYBER FRAUD LOOK LIKE IN INDIA? The FIU's internal analysis has identified recurring cyber fraud patterns that continue to victimise thousands of Indians each month. Among the most prevalent are digital arrest fraud, where scammers pose as law enforcement officials to extort money from individuals through false accusations. Another growing threat is the electricity bill scam, where scammers send fake alerts and phishing links, using remote access tools like Anydesk to control victims' devices and siphon off funds. 'Why are there no public service messages on OTT platforms, cinema screens, or national television? Why aren't awareness drives being held in schools, colleges, or government institutions? Why not educate the masses through WhatsApp alerts or SMS campaigns?" an MP asked during the meeting, as per sources. Another MP remarked: 'The one that has escalated beyond expectations – digital arrest scams, now emerging as one of the most dangerous cyber frauds in the country." Experts have called for stronger institutional accountability in this high-stakes environment. While the CBI and NIA continue to probe high-level financial crime, the I4C, under the home ministry, remains the central coordinating body for cybercrime control. WHAT ARE THE CURRENT SAFEGUARDS? Representatives of the FIU told the panel that consultations have been held with police and administrative officials across all states and union territories. They said red flag indicators have been issued to banks and payment aggregators to detect and report mule accounts. Regulatory suggestions have been submitted to the Reserve Bank of India for stricter due diligence, IP monitoring, and product risk assessment. Advisories on customer verification and anti-tipping protocols have been issued in coordination with I4C, they added. WHAT IS THE ACTION PLAN? There is now a call for the formation of a dedicated national task force to tackle sophisticated scams like digital arrest, which often involve international actors and encrypted communications. The FIU has urged legal reforms to prohibit the use of mule accounts and SIM cards, which serve as the foundation of these fraud networks. These tools, often procured through organised crime syndicates, are used to bypass OTP and KYC protocols, making detection even harder.

India reinstates geo-blocks on Pakistani celebrity accounts
India reinstates geo-blocks on Pakistani celebrity accounts

New Indian Express

time3 hours ago

  • New Indian Express

India reinstates geo-blocks on Pakistani celebrity accounts

This latest move follows the Union Ministry of Home Affairs' recommendation to block 16 Pakistan-based YouTube channels after the recent act of terrorism in Pahalgam. The Ministry alleged that these channels spread communally sensitive and provocative content as well as false information that targets India, its security agencies and armed forces. Besides the YouTube channels, social media profiles of numerous public figures from Pakistan, including actors Saba Qamar, Mahira Khan, Ahad Raza Mir, Yumna Zaidi, Danish Taimoor, Fawad Khan, Hania Aamir, and Mawra Hocane remain geo-blocked in India. Moreover, the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) has told Indian OTT platforms, digital intermediaries, and media streaming services to stop distributing web series, songs, podcasts, films, and other media content hailing from Pakistan. The Ministry's advisory mentioned national security as the primary concern.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store