A viral video from Bengaluru's Panathur Road has once again highlighted the city's crumbling infrastructure, and this time, it looks straight out of an adventure sports clip. The footage shows office-goers on two-wheelers navigating deep trenches, broken alleys, and open drains
Why Taliban Parading Pak Soldiers' Trousers Revived The 1971 War Memory?

'93,000' Trending: Why Taliban Parading Pak Soldiers' Trousers Revived The 1971 War Memory?
Videos of the Taliban displaying trousers allegedly from fleeing Pakistani soldiers have gone viral. Know the historical link to '93,000' and the 1971 surrender that has caused a propaganda loss for Pakistan amid the fragile truce.
A shaky ceasefire has been in place between Pakistan and Afghanistan after a week of heavy clashes along their shared border, but the fallout has left Islamabad with a bad propaganda loss. Footage of Taliban militants marching with captured Pakistani military equipment and, most importantly, alleged Pakistani soldiers' trousers left behind as their posts were deserted has been trending, triggering general ridicule on social media.
The most humiliating part of the online story revolves around the figure '93,000,' which was a trending hashtag on X (formerly Twitter).
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1971 War Flashback: Afghan activists and social media activists have termed the scene as the "93,000 pants ceremony 2.0." This is a direct allusion to the surrender of 93,000 Pakistani troops to the Indian Army and the Mukti Bahini in the 1971 war, resulting in Bangladesh's establishment.
From 1971 to 2025, nothing seems to have changed for Team 93,000 history keeps repeating itself.
1971 to 2025 pic.twitter.com/Xn9jw0H7s9 — Wahida (@RealWahidaAFG) October 13, 2025
Symbolic Surrender: The gesture of showing the abandoned trousers—presumably dropped in haste as Pakistani troops retreated—is being drawn parallel by commentators with the formal surrender of weapons and rank insignia by Lt General A.A.K. Niazi in 1971.
Social Media Reaction: Afghan activist Fazal Afghan and army veteran Kanwal Jeet Singh Dhillon, among several others, posted the iconic 1971 surrender photo, employing the popular hashtag to mock Pakistan's military failures against the Taliban.
93000 was always a fav number https://t.co/yngnilsT0F pic.twitter.com/oR47WFuENG — KJS DHILLON(@TinyDhillon) October 15, 2025
The humiliating clips come amid intense battles along the contested border.
Pakistani Assault: The skirmishes broke out after Pakistan launched a cross-border raid to attack bases of the outlawed Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which Islamabad blames the Afghan Taliban for sheltering.
Taliban Defiance: The Afghan Taliban were effective defenders, reporting to have killed more than 60 Pakistani soldiers and 20 border posts.
Ceasefire Claims: A ceasefire was agreed upon after calls from mediators such as Qatar and Saudi Arabia. Both sides have, however, declared victory over the truce:
Taliban Claim: A Taliban representative said the truce was agreed upon at the "insistence" of the Pakistani side, attributing their successful attacks to putting Pakistan under a state of emergency.
Pakistani Claim: Sources from the UAE-based military in Pakistan claim the ceasefire was agreed upon at Afghanistan's request.
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Source: ZeeNews
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A viral video from Bengaluru's Panathur Road has once again highlighted the city's crumbling infrastructure, and this time, it looks straight out of an adventure sports clip. The footage shows office-goers on two-wheelers navigating deep trenches, broken alleys, and open drains
3 months ago