03 March 2026
Kart-e-Char, Kabul, Afghanistan

Fake Debunked: No Evidence of Pakistani Anti-Terrorism Court Life Imprisonment in Absentia for Eight Journalists

Fake Debunked: No Evidence of Pakistani Anti-Terrorism Court Life Imprisonment in Absentia for Eight Journalists
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CLAIMS ARE FALSE: A circulating report stated that a Pakistani anti-terrorism court sentenced eight journalists and social media commentators to life imprisonment in absentia after convicting them of terrorism-related offences. There is no credible evidence or court record to support this assertion. Major outlets and authorities have not corroborated the report, and it appears to originate from unverified posts on social media.

Why this spread happened: some Indian media outlets and social media accounts linked the incident to Pakistan by using loaded language and ambiguous phrasing. Without verifiable documents or official statements, the report exploited geopolitical tensions and a generic fear of Pakistan to prompt sensational headlines. Misattribution and haste in reporting contributed to the confusion.

How to verify: check the Pakistan judiciary's official releases, court dockets, or reports from reputable international outlets. If a case existed, there would be a verifiable docket number, a court name, a date, and credible coverage. Until then, the claim remains unverified and should be treated with extreme caution.

Impact and corrections: The claim is misleading and not supported by credible evidence. Readers should resist sensational headlines and rely on primary sources. Similar stories often surface during periods of cross-border tensions; contextualize carefully, and look for independent corroboration from trusted outlets.

Diaspora Correspondent at Afghan Global Lens

Leena Safi is the diaspora correspondent for Afghan Global Lens, based in Toronto. She fled Afghanistan as a teenager and now bridges the gap between the global Afghan community and the homeland. She produces features on refugee resettlement challenges, interviews exiled intellectuals and officials, and analyzes how international policy affects everyday Afghans.

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