The singer accused the filmmaker and his production house Dharma Productions of stealing his music. (IANS) 
Pakistan Watch

Pakistani singer accuses KJo of copying his song in Jug Jugg Jeeyo

Pakistani singer Abrar ul Haq has accused on Twitter that his song 'Nach Punjaban' has been copied in Karan Johar's upcoming production 'Jug Jugg Jeeyo' without his permission.

Author : NewsGram Desk

Pakistani singer Abrar ul Haq has accused on Twitter that his song 'Nach Punjaban' has been copied in Karan Johar's upcoming production 'Jug Jugg Jeeyo' without his permission.

The singer accused the filmmaker and his production house Dharma Productions of stealing his music and shared that he has not sold his song to any Indian movie.

In a tweet, Abrar said: "I have not sold my song Nach Punjaban' to any Indian movie and reserve the rights to go to court to claim damages. Producers like @karanjohar should not use copy songs."

"This is my 6th song being copied which will not be allowed at all. @DharmaMovies @karanjohar."

In another one he wrote, "Song Nach Punjaban' has not been licensed to anyone. If someone is claiming it, then produce the agreement. I will be taking legal action #NachPunjaban."

'Jug Jugg Jeeyo' trailer was unveiled on Sunday. The film stars Anil Kapoor, Neetu Kapoor, Kiara Advani, Varun Dhawan, and Manish Paul. The cast is seen grooving on the number.

Slated to release in theatres on June 24, 'Jug Jugg Jeeyo' is directed by Raj Mehta. (AA/IANS)

Subscribe to our channels on YouTube and WhatsApp 

DELUSIONAL TAKE: “Aravalli Hills Causing Pollution In Delhi”- Journalist Rajat Sharma

Bangladesh Spirals Further Into Chaos as NCP Leader Motaleb Shikder Is Shot in Khulna, Intensifying Fears Over Political Stability, Minority Safety, and the Viability of Upcoming National Elections

Ethanol Plant in Rajasthan’s Hanumangarh to be Scrapped Following Massive Farmers Protest

Bill Clinton Appears Repeatedly in Newly Released Epstein Files; Questions Emerge Over His 2006 India Visit

BJP’s Donations Surge to Over ₹6,000 Crore After Electoral Bonds Scrapped—85% of Total Political Donations in 2024-25