The Bondi Beach attack was a moment of horror that demanded sobriety, precision and restraint, yet almost as soon as the first police briefings emerged in Sydney, another, quieter drama began unfolding thousands of miles away, one that had less to do with the identities of the attackers and far more to do with the habits of an information ecosystem that now treats tragedy as an opportunity to rehearse old prejudices and recycle convenient enemies.
Australian authorities were clear from the outset. The attack was inspired by Islamist extremism, targeted a Jewish gathering during Hanukkah, and bore the unmistakable markers of ideological terrorism rather than any sectarian or interstate intrigue. The identity of the perpetrators, including the older gunman’s Indian nationality, was established through official channels. These facts were neither ambiguous nor contested.
Yet facts, as the hours that followed demonstrated, are often no match for vile propaganda.
Within a remarkably short span of time, images and names began circulating online that falsely identified a Pakistani-origin man living in Australia as one of the attackers, exposing him to fear, public vilification and potential violence, while several Indian television channels and social media accounts leaned into speculation that pointed reflexively toward Pakistan, not through evidence but through insinuation, familiarity and the unspoken assumption that such an accusation would not require proof to find an audience.
Pakistan’s response, notably, was measured and responsible. Officials condemned the attack unequivocally, distanced the state from any association with the perpetrators, and expressed solidarity with the victims. At the same time, Information Minister Attaullah Tarar described the misinformation campaign as originating from hostile quarters. Senator Sherry Rehman went a step further, arguing that the Financial Action Task Force should begin examining what she characterised as a growing pattern of support for extremist narratives and destabilising activities emanating from India. These were not throwaway remarks, nor were they made in a vacuum.
For years, Islamabad has submitted dossiers, shared intelligence and pointed to financial and logistical networks it says are linked to violence inside Pakistan, particularly in Balochistan, while also noting incidents and arrests in Bangladesh and elsewhere that suggest a wider regional footprint.
For years, Islamabad has submitted dossiers, shared intelligence and pointed to financial and logistical networks it says are linked to violence inside Pakistan, particularly in Balochistan, while also noting incidents and arrests in Bangladesh and elsewhere that suggest a wider regional footprint. None of this absolves Pakistan of its own responsibilities, but it complicates the moral simplicity with which Indian media outlets often frame terrorism, presenting India as the permanent victim and Pakistan as the default suspect.
That framing has become harder to sustain in recent years.
Canada’s allegation of Indian involvement in the killing of a Sikh activist on its soil, followed by a US indictment outlining an alleged Indian plot to assassinate another Khalistani figure in New York, did not emerge from Pakistani sources or friendly capitals. They came from members of the Five Eyes intelligence community, countries that have historically shown little inclination to amplify Islamabad’s grievances. These cases remain allegations under law, but they are detailed, specific and serious enough to have reshaped diplomatic conversations between India and some of its closest partners.
It is against this backdrop that the Bondi misinformation campaign acquires significance, not because it altered the outcome of an investigation, but because it revealed how instinctive and unreflective the impulse to implicate Pakistan has become within certain media ecosystems, particularly in India, where nationalism, ratings and ideological alignment have increasingly blurred the line between reporting and mobilisation.
The danger here is not merely reputational. When false narratives spread at speed, they endanger lives, corrode trust and distract attention from the real sources of violence, allowing extremist ideologies to hide behind identity-based blame games. The Pakistani man falsely identified after Bondi learned this the hard way when he was forced to plead publicly for his safety, while the correction of the record lagged far behind the original lie.
There is, however, a cautionary note for Pakistan as well.
Responding to misinformation with counter-allegation alone risks replicating the very dynamic Islamabad seeks to challenge. The more effective path lies in documentation, persistence and institutional engagement, in pressing international platforms to enforce standards, in building legal frameworks that treat deliberate disinformation as harm rather than mere speech, and in ensuring that Pakistan’s own media does not succumb to the same temptations of speed and spectacle.
The Bondi attack also offered another, quieter story that deserves attention. A Syrian-Australian Muslim ran toward the gunman and intervened. Jewish and Muslim mourners stood together in grief afterwards. That solidarity did not trend. It rarely does. But it remains the most honest rebuttal to both extremism and propaganda.
Indian media outlets that amplified falsehoods owe an apology, not as a diplomatic gesture but as a professional obligation, to the man they misidentified, to the victims whose tragedy was instrumentalised, and to audiences misled in the pursuit of spectacle. Silence, in this case, speaks loudly enough.
The writer is OpEd Editor (Daily Times) and can be reached at durenayab786 @gmail.com. She tweets @DureAkram.
