When the government announced a bounty of PKR 10 million on the heads of various hardened robbers, including him, he called the official hotline to contest the reward placed on his own head. Like any ‘viral dacoit’, he posted a video of himself making the call to the Punjab Home Department. Alongside questioning the authenticity of the list that included his name, he criticised the bounty system and argued why such large sums of money were not used to help the poor!
He doesn't like being called a daku though. In a video titled “hum daku nahi” (we are not dacoits), he explains how he comes from a lineage of respectable people, and feels sad when people call him a daku. All this, with an AK 47 on his arm. His views are socialist, and his wants, basic — he claims that he just wants safety for the people of his tribe and access to basic amenities, like schools.
Despite the preaching of ideal socialist views on YouTube, his actions in no way match that of a virtuous social media sensation. This dacoit-cum-YouTuber is one of the people wanted for a series of severe crimes including the recent murder of 11 police officers.
The rise of dacoit gangs in
But the bigger picture shows a deeper issue — the state's failure to support its marginalised communities, driving some toward crime as a means of survival. It also remains a mystery why the authorities are not able to track and capture such criminals despite the growing use of social media platforms among them.