Multiple coordinated handles operating from Pakistan are actively spreading anti-India narratives on the social media platform X (formerly Twitter). Investigations reveal that at least seven such accounts are systematically sharing misinformation, propaganda, and psychological warfare content targeting India. Interestingly, some of these users display India as their location on their profiles to masquerade as Indian citizens, but X’s internal location tracking shows their actual location inside Pakistan. This discrepancy confirms that these handles deliberately hide their identity to influence Indian audiences.
Many of these accounts spread false information on sensitive issues related to India, aiming to create distrust, dissatisfaction, and social tension. Their activity spikes suddenly during specific events, such as elections, terror incidents, diplomatic disputes, or social controversies, suggesting that their operations are organised and possibly part of a larger network. Pakistan-based digital ecosystems have long used this strategy of propaganda to damage India’s global image and fuel internal divisions.
This report provides a detailed analysis of the seven key handles—highlighting their identity, activity patterns, content style, and location-based discrepancies—to understand how anti-India propaganda is being executed digitally.
The seven identified accounts are:
- TricolorTales11 (https://x.com/tricolortales11)
- Avanti Anita https://x.com/Nexus_Again
- Yashita Nagpal https://x.com/rationaldialgue
- Ria Rathore https://x.com/riarathore836
- Hawk’s Eye https://x.com/Hawkss_eye
- Aniha https://x.com/anilieehere
- PARINDA https://x.com/DiyaSharma_10
1. TricolorTales11
This account presents itself as a storyteller “weaving truth, myth, and imagination.” It lists its location as India but X’s “About this account” section shows both its location and WhatsApp connection originate in Pakistan, confirming that the handle is operated from there.

Our team’s content analysis found that the account regularly posts anti-India propaganda. It shares inflammatory posts on internal Indian matters such as alleged temple demolitions in Delhi and Vellore, intelligence agencies interfering in elections, injustice in Kashmir, and unrest in Manipur—portraying them as systematic majoritarianism and geopolitical deceit. It also criticizes India’s foreign policy toward Pakistan, China, and Balochistan.
2. Avanti Anita
This account claims to belong to a resident of Navi Mumbai. But deeper investigation reveals this user is not Indian at all. While the profile currently displays “South Asia,” earlier screenshots shared by users show both its location and WhatsApp connection registered in Pakistan.
Our checks show that this handle was previously run under the name “Diya Sharma” before being renamed to “Anita Avanti.” The profile and cover photos are taken from the internet: the profile picture belongs to Instagram user Anchali Sharma Nautiyal, and the cover image is a stock photo from Shutterstock.

This account posts aggressive content targeting issues such as “Hindutva excesses,” India being a “laughing stock” after worshipping Putin once Trump ignored it, failures of the Indian diaspora, female foeticide, and the Sandesh app.

3. Yashita Nagpal (@YashitaNag66252)
Yashita Nagpal claims to be from Bihar and an “Indian journalist.” But the account is actually operated from Pakistan. Although it currently displays “South Asia,” earlier screenshots clearly show Pakistan as its location.
Her posts focus on highlighting political and social divides in India and encouraging youth protests.

4. Ria Rathore (@riarathore836)
This account uses Prime Minister Modi’s photograph as its profile image and lists the United Kingdom as its location. However, the investigation shows it is also Pakistan-operated.
Its online behaviour appears pro-BJP, praising the Modi government’s infrastructure work, criticizing Rahul Gandhi’s speeches in Bihar, and posting about Sikh issues, Dalit atrocities, and harassment of women cricketers.

5. Hawk’s Eye (@Hawkss_eye)
With 9,249 followers and a verified badge, this account calls itself a source for “real-time threat and intelligence insights.” Its location is Pakistan.
Its feed is an aggressive arm of the Pakistani narrative, glorifying the Pakistan Army and giving frequent updates from the Pakistan-Afghan border in a dramatic mix of Urdu urgency and English analysis. It accuses India of waging proxy wars, claims Pakistan is a besieged defender against a supposed Taliban–Iran–UAE–India nexus, and shares graphic content such as bloodied bodies, destroyed checkpoints, and “victorious” tunnel captures echoing ISPR-style wartime storytelling.
The purpose is clear: demonstrate military superiority, inflame Pakistani sentiments, and shape an echo chamber for conflict narratives.

6. Aniha (@anilieehere)
This Pakistan-based account, with 1,035 followers, appears like a friendly “follow back” profile but functions as a biased amplifier of establishment narratives.
Its content heavily praises the Sharif family for “stability,” lauds army’s “unity,” and openly supports ISPR’s actions. Meanwhile, Imran Khan is painted as a villain—portrayed as “mentally unstable” and accused of collaborating with India and Afghanistan to fuel hybrid threats and institutional instability.
It calls Baloch separatism an Indian “conspiracy” and labels figures like Mir Yaar Baloch as “scripted human rights proxies.”

7. Parinda (@nocturnal_lad_)
This account claims to be linked to Japan but actually operates from Pakistan. Its feed is filled with inflammatory Urdu comments, abuses, and political insults. It frequently targets PML-N leaders with derogatory language, distorts issues related to Imran Khan and the PTI narrative, and engages in vulgar trolling.
Although engagement is low, it consistently spreads hate, fake narratives, and toxic commentary—like a hidden digital predator.

Conclusion
The investigation clearly shows that multiple Pakistan-based X handles are systematically advancing anti-India digital propaganda. Their main strategy is to disguise themselves as Indian users to gain trust and emotionally influence Indian audiences. Content patterns, posting timing, and misleading narratives indicate that this is not an individual activity but an organized, purposeful network.
These handles become highly active during elections, diplomatic disputes, or sensitive events, revealing their objective: to create confusion, distrust, and division within India.

