Webdesk: While speaking in the Indian Lok Sabha, Indian Home Minister Amit Shah appeared completely confused.
He was reading from a written speech and seemed mixed up about the dates of the incident that took place in Pahalgam on April 22 and the timeline of its investigation.
He repeatedly said that the investigation began on the night of May 22. At one point, even a fellow member seated nearby was seen trying to correct the Indian Home Minister, reminding him that the attack had taken place on April 22. However, Amit Shah kept repeating the date as May 22, 2025.
The Wire also reported this mix up:

This confusion can be seen as a sign of nervousness in the Modi government. To defend the false narrative that has been built by blaming Pakistan, the Modi government seemed to be deflecting the real questions.
Netizens could be seen fuming over this behaviour.
Today in Lok Sabha…..
— Tarun Gautam (@TARUNspeakss) July 29, 2025
Question: Why did we stop when we had an upper hand in the w@r against Pakistan?
Amit Shah: A lot has to be thought about w@r and Manyavar, Jawahar Lal Nehru……Sardar Patel…..Nehru…. Patel
No answer, same old bullsh!t.
#earthquake
— Shree Kotwal (@shreekotwal) July 30, 2025
Lok Sabha ke Andhar…
Kal Amit Shah…
&
Narendra Modi…
Ne…
Kitni Baar Nahru ka naam liya?
Kitni baar Congress ka naam liya?
Kitni baar Pakistan ka naam liya?
Phir bhi…
TRUMP
Bolne ki himmat nahi hui?
Jai Shree Ram… pic.twitter.com/7QmJ7o88Xf
After Pahalgam, not a single country has condemned Pakistan, everybody has condemned terrorism. What does that mean?: #RahulGandhi's on international reaction to Pahalgam terror attack.
— Economic Times (@EconomicTimes) July 29, 2025
🇮🇳⚔️🇵🇰 #Parliament #OperationSindoor Debate Live Updates ➠ https://t.co/4GFifQtTWX pic.twitter.com/rkg13Kv9Ou
Indian Home Minister Amit Shah also said on Tuesday that the three men killed in a recent gunfight in Indian Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK) were carrying Pakistani voter ID cards and chocolates made in Pakistan.
“I want to tell … the entire nation that these were the three terrorists who killed our citizens … and now all three have been killed,” Shah said while speaking in parliament during a discussion on the India-Pakistan conflict.
India claims the attackers were Pakistani nationals. However, Pakistan has denied this.
In May, Pakistan answered back with Operation Bunyan-um-Marsoos after India started Operation Sindoor.
During the 87-hour battle, Pakistan shot down six Indian jets, including three Rafale planes, as well as several drones.
According to sources this operation is being used to hide India’s recent failures in the conflict with Pakistan. They said Indian forces are now carrying out fake encounters.
The plan, according to sources, is to kill Pakistanis already in Indian jails and then present them as cross-border terrorists.
Sources also said these fake encounters are meant to weaken the freedom struggle in IIOJK.
They added that the plan is also being used to protect the political image of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government.
Read more: Amit Shah’s ‘Pakistani chocolates’ claim adds another twist to the Pahalgam encounter story