Newsflash:

Pakistanis Unleash Memes as Indian Media Credibility Crumbles

Pakistani social media users challenge Indian media credibility with memes after false war claims go viral.

2 min read

Pakistanis Unleash Memes as Indian Media Credibility Crumbles

Pakistanis Unleash Memes as Indian Media Credibility Crumbles[image via Dawn]

May 9, 2025

As tensions between two nuclear-armed neighbors escalate, Indian media credibility is under fire — not from missiles, but from memes. Pakistani social media users have turned a tense moment into a satire-filled digital battlefield.

Indian news outlets, known for their dramatic tone, offered meme-makers a goldmine. From reporting a fake attack on Karachi Port to misidentifying Turkish soldiers as “captured Pakistani pilots,” Indian media went on a misinformation spree. The blunders didn’t go unnoticed.

[Image via Dawn]

From Breaking News to Viral Memes

One meme showed a confused man staring at a headline claiming “Lahore under siege.” Another used screenshots from Indian TV, mocking their animations and dramatic war coverage. The memes quickly spread across platforms like X, Instagram, and TikTok.

“Their news channels look like action movies,” joked one user. “All that’s missing is a dance number.”

Pakistani users also mocked how Indian channels used video game footage and old military clips, passing them off as real-time combat visuals. Many questioned the ethics of such reporting.

Humor as Resistance

“This isn’t just funny — it’s resistance,” said 22-year-old Zoya Ahmed, a student in Islamabad. “We’re laughing, but we’re also exposing propaganda.”

Fact-checkers stepped in to debunk Indian media’s claims. One viral clip showed Turkish NATO troops presented as Pakistani captives. Another showed a port fire from years ago, passed off as “breaking news” from Karachi.

While the region remains tense, Pakistanis have found a way to cope and push back. By turning falsehoods into punchlines, they’re challenging the narrative war with humor.

Analysts warn that misinformation during conflicts can heighten panic and risk escalation. Still, social media remains a space for citizens to reclaim some control — and a little comic relief.

As missiles fly and tensions grow, one thing is clear: Indian media credibility may have suffered its biggest blow yet — and it came from a meme.

[image via Dawn]

Related Articles

UNODC report says Taliban’s poppy ban drastically reduced opium output but triggered a surge in methamphetamine production
Sources reveal Afghanistan’s General Directorate of Intelligence (GDI) relocating banned TTP fighters into local Afghan communities following Istanbul talks
A joint operation by CTD, local police, and law enforcement in Karak killed Nusrat Hakim, a key commander of Fitna-ul-Khawarij
Thousands were slaughtered and half a million displaced in what survivors call a “state-backed genocide”, a tragedy erased from South Asia’s memory.

Post a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *