Pakistan Drops Case Over Disinformation in UK Riots

Pakistan drops the case against Farhan Asif over disinformation related to the UK riots. False information had fueled the unrest.

Authorities in Pakistan have dropped the case against a man. He was arrested last week for spreading disinformation. This disinformation fueled the recent UK riots.

Police said they could not find evidence that Farhan Asif originated the news. As a result, they decided not to continue with the case.

Leaving a Lahore court on Monday, Mr Asif declined to answer the BBC’s questions.

Unrest broke out in England and Northern Ireland earlier this month. This followed the spread of disinformation about the name and identity of the alleged perpetrator of a stabbing attack in Southport. The attack resulted in the deaths of three young girls.

A BBC investigation linked Mr. Asif to a website called Channel3Now. This site posted an article with a false name for the alleged attacker. The article also wrongly suggested that the attacker was an asylum seeker who arrived in the UK by boat last year.

People widely shared the article on social media, and it quickly went viral.

UK Riot Case Against Farhan Asif Dropped

In Monday’s court session, police said that Mr. Asif was a freelancer at a private channel. They found that he had shared news using a different social media account in the UK.

After UK police refuted the false information he shared, Mr. Asif deleted the post. He also issued an apology on Channel3Now for sharing the news, according to the police.

The judge asked Mr Asif a rhetorical question about whether he now realised he should be careful about the information he shares online.

BBC Verify previously tracked down several people linked to Channel3Now. They questioned someone who claimed to be “management” at the site.

That person told the BBC that the publication of the false name “shouldn’t have happened.” They added that it was an error and not intentional.

People spread false information about the attacker online after the killing of three young girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class on 29 July.

Violent disorder then broke out in Southport before spreading to towns and cities across England and Northern Ireland, fueled by misinformation, the far-right and anti-immigration sentiment.

In the past three weeks, more than 500 people have faced charges related to the disorder, and courts have sentenced at least 170, sending many to jail.

This news is sourced from BBC and is intended for informational purposes only.

News Desk

Your trusted source for insightful journalism. Stay informed with our compelling coverage of global affairs, business, technology, and more.

Recent

Pakistan’s shift from arms importer to defense exporter reveals how indigenous military industry has become central to sovereignty in a fragmented global order.

Pakistan’s Defense Industrial Breakout

As the liberal international order fragments, Pakistan has executed a decisive shift from defense dependency to indigenous production. Through exports, combat validation, and joint industrialization, Islamabad is redefining sovereignty as an industrial and diplomatic asset.

Read More »
A critical reassessment of Afghan repatriation from Pakistan, weighing human rights advocacy against state sovereignty, security, and legal realities.

Rethinking Afghan Repatriation from Pakistan

Amnesty International’s call to halt Afghan repatriation overlooks the limits of long-term hospitality. For Pakistan, the issue is less about abandoning rights than reasserting sovereign immigration control amid shifting realities in Afghanistan.

Read More »
Andy Halus’s interview signals a shift in US–Pakistan relations toward minerals, education, and soft power, marking a post-security partnership in 2026.

The New Architecture of US–Pakistan Relations

Andy Halus’s interview signals a strategic shift in US–Pakistan relations from security-centric ties to a multidimensional partnership centered on minerals, education, and soft power. Projects like Reko Diq now stand as the key test of this new architecture.

Read More »