A doctored newspaper clipping claiming an Australian masthead had exposed Narendra Modi for luring a crowd with “free curry and roti” has been debunked as an AI-manipulated fake, and it is a neat case study in how the technology is being used to launder political misinformation.
When Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed more than 25,000 members of the Indian diaspora at Melbourne’s Marvel Stadium on 9 July, the event drew the usual mix of celebration and partisan sniping online. Within days, a screenshot began circulating that appeared to show an Australian newspaper page reporting that the crowd had been drawn by free food, under the headline “Free Curry and Roti pulled massive crowd”.
It was fake.
An AI-altered real page
Fact-checkers at BOOM, Alt News and The Quint traced the image and found it was not a real clipping but an AI-distorted version of a genuine newspaper page, with a fabricated headline and article digitally edited in. The Age, the masthead whose layout was mimicked, confirmed that it had published no such report and that the viral image appeared to be an AI-altered version of its page. No Australian newspaper ran the claim, which is entirely false.
What makes the fake effective is precisely that it does not look AI-generated in the usual sense. There is no six-fingered hand or melting background. Instead, the manipulation borrows the authority of a real, trusted newspaper and changes only the words. That is a harder forgery to spot and a more corrosive one, because it burns a real publication’s credibility as collateral.
A pattern, not a one-off
Australian outlets are increasingly on the receiving end. ABC News Verify has been analysing cases where AI-generated or AI-altered images are passed off as genuine, and the Modi clipping fits a growing template: take a real, high-profile event, attach a fabricated masthead, and let it travel through diaspora and partisan networks faster than any correction can follow.
Why it matters
For Australian media, this is the sharp end of the same AI trust problem turning up in advertising and the wider information feed. When a masthead’s look can be cloned and its words rewritten in minutes, the value of a verified, accountable source goes up, not down. It also raises the stakes for the provenance and watermarking work now bundled into the government’s national AI framework: proving what is real is quickly becoming as important as building what is new.
Sources: BOOM, Alt News, The Quint and The Canberra Times.

















































