LONDON: The Centre for Information Resilience (CIR) has exposed a network of fake profiles of Sikh influencers created to target the farmer protests in India as well as the Khalistan movement.
The CIR report โ titled ‘Analysis of the #RealSikh Influence Operation’ โ identified a core network of fake accounts that targeted โother accounts supportive of Indian nationalism in order to spread and amplify the content and narratives generated by the core networkโ.
The report exposes a coordinated influence operation that uses fake personas on multiple social media platforms to promote narratives arguing that โrealโ Sikhs support the Indian government and Indian nationalism, and that advocates of Sikh autonomy and independence are extremist or terrorist.
Some of the fake networkโs messaging included statements calling for action such as Indian โNationalists shouldnโt remain watching silentlyโ and that they โneed to counter and expose them [the Khalistani movement for Sikh independence]โ to โsave Indiaโ from โPakistan, Canada, UK, and USโ.
All these accounts used repetitive hashtags such as #RealSikhAgainstKhalistanis #Khalistanis #SikhRejectKhalistan.
โThe network increased its activity since the commencement of the farmersโ protests in India. Both the farmersโ protests and the Khalistan independence movement have been the two most frequently targeted subjects of the core network of fake accounts,โ the report stated.
The content produced by these accounts was also endorsed by various verified accounts who worked with these accounts, suggesting that there was a coordinated govt backed activity.
Many high-profile accounts were found to be involved in focused targeting of Sikhs For Justiceโs General-Counsel Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, who is running the Khalistan Referendum campaign for the separation of Punjab from India. All these accounts that published Pannunโs cartoon memes called him a Pakistani agent, fake Sikh and enemy of India and Sikhs.

One user tweeted Narendra Modi, kicking Pannun while heโs running away. The tweet read: โThe reply of a #RealSikh to the #FakeSikh Pannun. Dear Pannu, there is no place for Khalistan and no Sikh wants Khalistan.โ
Another fake Twitter user girl wrote: โThere is the difference between a #RealSikh and โFakesikh, whom you want to follow? A โRealSikh who died fighting for our country or a #FakeSikh who spreads #KhalistanTerrorism at Pakistanโs behest? Salute to Subedar Singh and #ShameOnPannu.โ
โOur research shows a coordinated effort to distort perceptions and discredit the push for Sikh independence, label Sikh political interests as extremist, stoke cultural tensions within India and international communities, and promote Indian government content,โ CIR Investigations Director Benjamin Strick said.

โThe network amplified its messaging on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram through a core network of accounts that used profile pictures stolen from celebrity social media accounts and used names common in Sikh communities to appear as legitimate members of the Sikh community,โ Strick added.
The report said: “The networkโs advocacy that supporters of Sikh independence are extremist or terrorist, and that Indian nationalists must take action against them, may contribute to an environment in which some actors consider intimidation of, or violence towards, the Sikh community as legitimate.”
The CIR said it had collected the data of 398 accounts that had liked, retweeted or commented on tweets that used the hashtags #RealSikhsAgainstKhalistan, #SikhsRejectKhalistan and #RealSikhs. These were three hashtags that appeared to be commonly used in the network, particularly by accounts with larger numbers of followers.

โThe network amplified its messaging on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram through a core network of accounts that used profile pictures stolen from celebrity social media accounts and used names common in Sikh communities to appear as legitimate members of the Sikh community,โ Strick added.
The report said: “The networkโs advocacy that supporters of Sikh independence are extremist or terrorist, and that Indian nationalists must take action against them, may contribute to an environment in which some actors consider intimidation of, or violence towards, the Sikh community as legitimate.”

The CIR said it had collected the data of 398 accounts that had liked, retweeted or commented on tweets that used the hashtags #RealSikhsAgainstKhalistan, #SikhsRejectKhalistan and #RealSikhs. These were three hashtags that appeared to be commonly used in the network, particularly by accounts with larger numbers of followers.
Theย BBCย published the reportย on an exclusive basis and said that there is no evidence linking this network directly with the Indian government, but itโs believed that such tactics are applied routinely by the BJP government to influence minds and previously hundreds of accounts have been suspended for being involved in coordinated activity against Sikhs, Pakistan and dissenting Indian voices.

