Fearing Pakistan’s growing global reputation, the Indian media and the Indian army have launched a propaganda campaign against Pakistan and claimed to have arrested several terrorists which including Engineers and doctors.
Indian security agencies have falsely claimed that they have unearthed a ‘white-collar terrorist network’ linked to Pakistan’s intelligence agency Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), which includes highly educated people, including doctors, engineers, and PhD scholars.
According to Indian media propaganda, security agencies have alleged that Pakistan’s intelligence agency has adopted a new strategy to evade surveillance, under which professional and educated people are being recruited and used for terrorist activities. Indian media is also propagandizing with officials that one of the biggest attacks ever in India was being planned through this network.
According to Indian officials, security forces have arrested several people in joint operations in different areas of Jammu and Kashmir, especially in Budgam and Srinagar. These include two medical professionals, Dr. Adil Ahmed Rather and Dr. Muzammil, who are accused of being linked to the banned organization Jaish-e-Mohammed.
Indian authorities’ propaganda that three major terrorist attacks were foiled as a result of recent operations. A senior officer is being propagandized that ‘ISI was using doctors so that they could evade the normal security system and continue their activities without suspicion.’
According to reports, this revelation came after a person was arrested for sharing Jaish-e-Mohammed propaganda material on social media. During interrogation, he provided information about a network that was providing financial and technical support to terrorism through highly educated individuals.
Indian media has also claimed that the Gujarat ATS (Anti-Terrorism Squad) has recently arrested a PhD scholar and a religious scholar who was allegedly involved in developing biological weapons, but this allegation could not be independently verified.
Indian authorities said that the network was operating through educated individuals from various countries, including the United States, who hid their activities under the guise of research or humanitarian service projects.
Security officials have termed this a new phase of ‘hybrid warfare’ and said that Pakistan’s involvement of ‘educated Islamists’ in the terrorist network is a serious threat to national security. There has been no official response from Pakistan to these allegations so far. However, international observers say that such allegations often come up during elections or political occasions in India, so they should be verified by international and impartial sources so that their veracity can be properly assessed.
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