A threat actor has advertised a massive data breach involving Pakistan’s Higher Education Commission (HEC). This incident exposes the sensitive personal records of over 1.5 million Pakistani citizens. The attacker recently listed the dataset on a cybercrime forum. Furthermore, they claim the data originates directly from the HEC’s centralized higher education database.
The threat actor states this 2026 dataset is entirely fresh. Moreover, they guarantee it contains zero duplicates. To prove authenticity, the attacker shared public sample records on the forum. Consequently, the hacker explicitly urged cybersecurity researchers to verify the dataset and avoid labeling it an “alleged leak” in headlines.
The leaked database structure reveals extensive Personally Identifiable Information (PII). Specifically, the compromised fields include:
- Application IDs and Full Names
- CNIC (Computerized National Identity Card) Numbers
- Father’s Names
- Registered Email Addresses and Mobile Numbers
- Usernames (derived from mobile numbers or emails)
- Gender and Dates of Birth (DOB)
- Nationality and Religion
- Blood Groups
- Complete Postal and Permanent Addresses
Cybersecurity analysts warn of critical, long-term threats if experts fully validate this dataset. Threat actors can use these combined data points to execute identity theft and bypass financial verification systems. Additionally, attackers can craft highly convincing spear-phishing campaigns using demographic and educational backgrounds. Similarly, criminals can leverage mobile numbers and CNICs to trick telecom providers into approving SIM-swap attacks. Ultimately, this data breach facilitates long-term espionage targeting students, researchers, and government-affiliated individuals across Pakistan.
