Based on the recommendations of the Union Home Ministry, the Government of India banned major YouTube channels, Pakistani news outlets and individual ‘analysts’ who were peddling disinformation and anti-India propaganda after the Pahalgam attack by Islamic terrorists backed by Pakistan.
Pakistan Today, in one of its reports, called the group of men pasting posters "the extremist group wearing saffron scarves". Miffed by the act, Pakistani media claimed that it was not an isolated incident but part of a "broader, coordinated campaign led by Hindutva groups and far-right politicians".
The sinister report attempts to paint a picture as if to influence the electoral landscape by making insinuations including that the Malanggad hill area is deprived of amenities because it is a Muslim area.
The falsehoods of Munizae Jahangir were debunked by ANI Editor-in-Chief Smita Prakash, who made it crystal clear that no such interview was conducted in the first place.