Facebook- Cartwheel for Khalistan’s Bogey

Navdeep Singh
4 min readJun 15, 2021

The in-famous Farmers’ Protest of India has once again regained its required hype specially after the fake rape allegations of a girl from Bengal. After delving deeper into the Twitter, I turned towards Facebook and scrutinized how the fake accounts are playing a massive role in disseminating hatred and instigating farmers who have been peacefully protesting for their fundamental rights. Such wilful intentions are maligning the image of innocent farmers.

Interestingly, the girl with same picture exists with another name on Twitter. Here is the proof:

Following the same pattern of picking the images of young girls from the internet and exploiting their identity, they have been discriminating their vicious agenda.

The girl who is Janeesa Kaur on Facebook is Ash Kaur on Instagram.

My heart boils when they steal the images of our girls and use it to flourish their ulterior motives. Look at the proof below:

The story doesn’t end here. Here is more to it.

Among such humdrum and existing chaos, Pakistan found it as an exciting opportunity to fuel the facade. Interestingly, on various Khalistani pages the content was posted in Urdu rather than in Punjabi or English which is quite strange.

Even fake pages were created in the name of meme material to propagate their agenda.

Shah Mahmood Qureshi, Foreign Minister of Pakistan said in the month of February, “You saw, the world saw, that yesterday Imran Khan threw a Kartarpur Googly” Such hurtful comments pierced through the hearts of the Sikh Community. Seems like Pakistani are more interested in the making of Khalistan rather than Sikhs. Look at the example below:

Even prominent Pakistani media portals did not shy away from adding fuel to the fire by pushing out fake news. The flag hoisted on the Red Fort on the Republic Day was a Khalsa flag rather than a Khalistani flag but as you could see.

The handle which was in news then was of @DalipOfficial_ which was later suspended by Twitter upon finding out its implausibility and interestingly, Pakistan Insider become one of its first propagators and shared the fake news.

Another fake news which caught my attention was how Pakistan Observer’s Editor in Chief, Faisal Zahid Malik, interviewed Jagjit Singh Chauhan in the year 1985 but upon delving deeper, I found out that on his Linkedin profile that he started working in Pak Observer only from the year 1989 and to go by the records he was only 19 years old in 1985. Here’s the proof:

Here is the interview:

When Farmers’ Protest was at its peak in January, 2021 then a hashtag #KisaanHulKhalistan was made to trend and interestingly, all the accounts who picked this hashtag were fake.

Thus, it is necessary to look out for truth because often at a single click you may contribute to a pool of fake news.

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Navdeep Singh

Live in Britain, heart in India. Proud Sikh | Anti Propagandist | Anti Khalistan | Non-Political | Coffee addict | Views are my own.