Indian media giant breached by Afghan hackers; questions raised on country’s cybersecurity
In a humiliating breach that has sent shockwaves through India's digital security landscape, the prominent media network, OneIndia, was successfully compromised by a group identifying themselves as "True Muslim Afghans."
ISLAMABAD, Apr 23 (APP):In a humiliating breach that has sent shockwaves through India's digital security landscape, the prominent media network, OneIndia, was successfully compromised by a group identifying themselves as "True Muslim Afghans."
The hackers successfully infiltrated the network's digital platforms, which boast a massive reach of over 30 million followers, to broadcast a defiant political message.
The incident is being viewed by regional observers not merely as a technical breach, but as a calculated geopolitical strike.
The hackers, believed to be potentially aligned with the Northern Alliance and other resistance factions — used the compromised broadcast channels to publicly denounce the current Interim Afghan Government (IAG) and the Taliban's (TTA) shifting policies.
The group utilized the hijacked platform to display the Afghan flag, symbolising their rejection of the current regime in Kabul.
The hackers vehemently condemned the growing proximity between the Taliban and the Indian establishment.
This act serves as a direct message from the resistance, signaling that many segments of the Afghan populace do not endorse the Taliban's opportunistic diplomatic outreach to New Delhi.
The breach underscores a deep-seated resentment among Afghan patriots who view the Taliban's recent engagement with India as a betrayal of their national sovereignty and a reversal of long-standing ideological positions.
This breach of a major Indian media outlet raises alarming questions regarding the credibility of India's national cybersecurity apparatus.
Security experts are questioning how a group operating from outside state-sanctioned channels could so easily bypass the firewalls and protective measures of a premier Indian media organization.
The incident has sparked a wider debate in regional security circles: If the Indian state cannot secure its digital and media infrastructure against non-state actors from a fractured and struggling Afghanistan, how would it possibly withstand a coordinated cyber offensive from established regional powers like Pakistan or China?
As the OneIndia network struggles to contain the fallout and restore its damaged credibility, this event remains a potent reminder of the escalating risks in the digital domain and the increasing intersection of regional political resistance with modern cyber warfare.
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