BV Singh: Pakistan’s Ghost Singer Disinformation Network

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Over the past few months, videos of an artist called BV Singh have been going viral. The songs have political themes – praising Pakistan’s military, criticizing Indian officials by name, mocking Indian media, and supporting Khalistan. The videos say he’s a Sikh singer based in Calgary, Canada.

The content looked professional. The view counts were high. Multiple channels were sharing it. People were talking about it. But something felt off.

We decided to dig deeper.

Key Findings:

  • BV Singh has no presence on any legitimate music streaming platform (Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon Music, Wikipedia)
  • All analyzed audio content was confirmed as AI-generated through voice detection software
  • All visual thumbnails on the primary distribution channel were AI-generated
  • Content was distributed across 18+ YouTube channels in a coordinated network
  • 18+ Twitter accounts amplified the content with coordinated messaging
  • 86% of Twitter posts built false credibility by calling BV Singh “famous”
  • 67% of posts directly praised Pakistan or referenced the Pakistan-Saudi defense pact
  • A legitimate record label’s name (Dhamaka Records) was falsely attributed to the content

1. Complete Absence from Music Platforms

The Digital Void

A comprehensive search across all major music streaming and distribution platforms revealed zero presence of any artist named BV Singh matching the profile of an “Indian-Canadian Sikh singer.” This absence is extraordinary for someone being promoted as “famous.” Legitimate artists, especially those described as “famous,” maintain verified profiles across multiple streaming platforms. The complete absence of BV Singh from all major music distribution channels is the first red flag, indicating this artist does not exist as a real person.

BV Singh pakistan

The BoomPlay Anomaly

An artist profile for BV Singh was discovered on BoomPlay, a Pakistan-based music platform. However, this profile was empty, with no songs, albums, or playable content. The profile appears to be a shell account created to establish a veneer of legitimacy without actually distributing musical content.

2. YouTube Distribution Network

On YouTube, we found his songs on 18 different channels. JD News had 281,000 views. Jamhoor Records had 84,000 views. Vella House Entertainment had 7,000 views. But these aren’t music channels. They’re news channels, reaction videos, and personal vlogs. All crediting one source: Jamhoor Records.

List of Pakistan-based YouTube channels promoting ‘BV Singh’

Jamhoor Records was created in July 2025, just five months ago. It has 23,900 subscribers and nearly 5 million views. We examined every thumbnail on the channel. All AI-generated. The songs hit specific political targets. One praises Pakistan’s military operation against India. Another mocks the Indian media. A third celebrates a Pakistan-Saudi defense deal. Each video shows a turbaned man in a studio with footage of protests, military parades, and Indian politicians.

For Example, Vella House Entertainment. It’s a personal vlog channel. Random life videos are getting a few hundred views each. Then, suddenly, one BV Singh music video with 7,000 views. This pattern repeated everywhere. Unrelated channels. One injected video. Massive view spikes.

All the video credits “Dhamaka Records” as the label. We found the real Dhamaka Records. They’re a legitimate music company with verified social media accounts. We checked their entire catalog. They have never released a BV Singh song. They have no artist by that name. However, an account named Dhamaka AI was found that circulated all the videos on Twitter.

An intriguing aspect of this operation was the use of reaction videos and song reviews created by Pakistan-based content creators. By producing these secondary videos that analyzed and responded to the AI-generated BV Singh songs, the operators established a layer of manufactured credibility. These reaction videos appeared to suggest that the songs were authentic enough to warrant critical attention and community discussion

3. Thematic Analysis of Songs

Song 1: Military Operation Praise

Praises Pakistan’s military operation against India, specifically naming Indian leaders Modi, Shah, and Doval as targets. Positions Pakistan as militarily superior.

Song 2: Media Bias Claims

Claims Indian media ignores Sikh suffering while extensively covering Pakistan. Attempts to drive a wedge between the Sikh community and the Indian state.

Song 3: Pakistan-Saudi Alliance Celebration

Celebrates Pakistan-Saudi military ties and defense pact. Uses this as evidence of Pakistan’s growing regional power.

Visual Content Strategy

Each video combines AI-generated imagery of a turbaned man in a recording studio with carefully selected B-roll footage: Khalistan protest movements, farmers’ agitations, Pakistani military parades, and clips of Indian politicians. This visual strategy creates false associations between Sikh identity, anti-India sentiment, and pro-Pakistan positioning.

Consistent Narrative Framework

Every piece of content positions India as the oppressor and Pakistan as the liberator. The messaging is not random; it follows a deliberate pattern designed to exploit existing tensions, weaponize Sikh identity, and legitimize pro-Pakistan narratives by making them appear to originate from within the Sikh diaspora itself. We ran four BV Singh songs through voice detection software. All AI-generated voices. There is no real singer.

4. Twitter and Facebook Coordination

The messaging strategy operates on three coordinated levels: first, establish BV Singh as a real and credible artist (86% of posts); second, use this fabricated credibility to legitimize pro-Pakistan political messaging (67% of posts); third, create urgency through censorship narratives to maximize viral spread (20% of posts).

On Twitter, we tracked 18 accounts sharing BV Singh content. Rooh_a_Ishq, IamDany_Ghazali, OnlyMySay, mahiivey, and others. Same captions: “Famous Sikh Singer BV Singh” or “Indian government trying to delete this song.” On Facebook, the same videos with identical messaging spread across multiple pages.

 5. Identity Weaponization Strategy

The most insidious element of this operation is the weaponization of Sikh identity. By creating a fictional Sikh artist from Canada, the campaign manufactures the appearance that anti-India, pro-Pakistan sentiment originates from within the Sikh diaspora community itself.

False Internal Voice: Creates an illusion that criticism of India comes from the Indian diaspora rather than external hostile actors

Community Division: Attempts to drive a wedge between the Sikh community and the Indian state by falsely representing Sikh sentiment

Legitimacy Theft: Exploits the credibility and respect associated with the Sikh community to launder hostile narratives

Diaspora Targeting: Canadian attribution specifically targets perception in Western countries where diaspora politics are sensitive

Conclusion

One song praises Pakistan’s military operation against India and names Modi, Shah, and Doval as targets. Another claims Indian media ignores Sikh suffering while covering Pakistan. A third celebrates Pakistan-Saudi military ties. Every song uses footage from Khalistan protests, farmers’ movements, and Pakistani military displays. Each track positions India as the oppressor and Pakistan as the liberator. The narrative is consistent and deliberate.

BV Singh is a ghost. No music platforms. No real recordings. Just AI-generated content forcefully distributed to make people believe a member of the Sikh community is speaking against India.