In a major security breach, the Twitter account of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's personal website (narendramodi.in) and its mobile app was hacked early this morning, the social media giant has confirmed. Hackers sent out some tweets from PM Modi’s account reportedly asking his followers to donate to the PM National Relief Fund through cryptocurrency. The account goes by the handle narendramodi_in and has 2.5 million followers and over 37,000 tweets since it was created in May 2011. 

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Twitter said that it has taken "steps to secure the compromised account" and is "actively investigating" the situation.  

"We're aware of this activity and have taken steps to secure the compromised account. We are actively investigating the situation. At this time, we are not aware of additional accounts being impacted," a Twitter spokesperson said in a statement. 

The account has now been recovered.

The last tweet from the account was on August 31. The tweet has a quote of PM Modi from his monthly radio programme "Mann Ki Baat". Regular updates from the Prime Minister's speeches and other programmes are tweeted from @narendramodi_in.

The incident comes after several Twitter accounts of prominent personalities were hacked in July.

Apart from this, PM Modi also has a personal account, which was unaffected by this incident. It has over 61 million followers. The account - @narendramodi - was created in January 2009. He uses Twitter extensively to reach out to people and share important information and updates.  

This is the second major incident of hacking on Twitter. Hackers had in July accessed Twitter's internal systems to hijack some of the platform's top voices including US presidential candidate Joe Biden, former US President Barack Obama, billionaire Elon Musk, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, and used them to solicit digital currency.