Tag: 1984

  • Sajjan jailed, but 1984’s wounds remain open

    Sajjan jailed, but 1984’s wounds remain open

    Media reports continue to refer to it as the 1984 anti-Sikh riots, ignoring the reality that the state machinery had wantonly turned vigilante in seeking vengeance against an entire community for Indira Gandhi’s murder.

    “But, unfortunately, Kumar is the only prominent Congress politician to be thus sentenced despite the culpability of numerous others in organizing Hindu mobs to hunt down droves of Sikhs, including women and children, on streets, in their homes and workplaces during these 72 hours and slaughtering them. Many victims were brutally ‘necklaced’ by pinioning their chests and arms with car tires soaked in petrol and setting them alight.”

    By Rahul Bedi

    It has taken 40 years to convict former Congress MP Sajjan Kumar for his murderous role in the anti-Sikh pogrom, that raged unchecked across New Delhi after Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was shot dead by her two Sikh bodyguards on October 31, 1984, ending only with her cremation three days later.

    But, unfortunately, Kumar is the only prominent Congress politician to be thus sentenced despite the culpability of numerous others in organizing Hindu mobs to hunt down droves of Sikhs, including women and children, on streets, in their homes and workplaces during these 72 hours and slaughtering them. Many victims were brutally ‘necklaced’ by pinioning their chests and arms with car tires soaked in petrol and setting them alight.

    By the time some semblance of order was enforced in the city by the Army, the organized massacres by the State-turned-avenger for the first time in independent India’s history, had left some 2,733 Sikhs dead in Delhi alone. Human rights organizations, however, put this number in the capital close to 4,000.

    Over decades thereafter, around 15 inquiry commissions, committees and special investigation teams (SITs) determined variously beyond reasonable doubt that these killings were engineered by Congress party loyalists like Kumar and his fellow MPs Kamal Nath, Dharam Dass Shastri, Jagdish Tytler and HKL Bhagat, who died in 2005 without even being tried.

    These multiple probes also determined that the extended slaughter was executed by a cross-section of largely Congress party members, sympathizers and bands of hired criminals, all of who carried voter lists to identify Sikh households across Delhi’s neighborhoods. Armed with crude swords, cleavers, scythes, kitchen knives and even scissors and an ‘inflammable white powder’, these mobs executed their retribution relentlessly, assured immunity from arrest.

    Justice SN Dhingra, who was appointed in 2018 to head the SIT to relook at the 186 cases related to the 1984 pogrom, stated in 2022 that the entire endeavor of the Congress government was to ensure that none of the major perpetrators of violence was punished.

    Consequently, it appointed Justice Ranganath Misra to head the commission inquiring into the unrest, fully aware that he was in line to become the 21st Supreme Court Chief Justice — which he did in 1990 — and, therefore, would be ‘cautious’ in his findings. Expectedly, Justice Misra indicted 19 Congress workers, who, ironically, were charged by the People’s Union for Civil Liberties with having abetted the massacres, but blatantly absolved the Congress party of all blame.

    Subsequently, the Nanavati Commission — the 10th such inquiry committee in 16 years — instituted in 2000 and headed by GT Nanavati, a retired SC judge, recommended prosecutions in 2005 only against Kumar and Tytler. This was despite several witnesses, including this writer, accusing several other Congress MPs and party cadres of their involvement in the violence. Criminal proceedings against Nath are underway, albeit proceeding at a glacial pace. The Nanavati Commission also revealed that of the original 587 FIRs registered after the 1984 violence, only 25 had resulted in convictions, of which just 12 were for murder. And, of the 440 overall convictions, many cases featured the same person being found guilty of as many as seven counts each. Subsequently, the SC-monitored SIT was formulated in 2018 and continues to ramble on.

    Meanwhile, Indira Gandhi’s son and successor Rajiv Gandhi justified the pogrom, declaring at a public rally in Delhi’s Boat Club on November 19, 1984 that ‘Jab bhi koi bada ped girta hai, to dharti thodi hilti hai’ (When a big tree falls, the earth shakes a little).

    The new PM had fittingly delivered the Congress party’s metaphor for the pogrom, even though officialese and media reports at the time, and even now, continue to refer to it as the 1984 anti-Sikh riots, ignoring the reality that the state machinery, including the local police, had openly and wantonly turned vigilante in seeking vengeance against an entire community for Indira Gandhi’s murder.

    Once Gandhi’s funeral pyre was lit, the State stirred itself into action by empowering the Army to restore order, even though the force had been summoned several days earlier.

    But the little-known reality regarding the Army’s deployment in Delhi was more complex and sinister. The force, which four months earlier had seamlessly cordoned off Punjab during Operation Bluestar, was provided vague instructions on its deployment by the Central authorities to control Delhi’s unmitigated chaos. All it knew was that it was authorized to act in conjunction with the Delhi Police, which itself was rudderless and, for all practical purposes, leaderless and in many instances, as emerged later, conniving in the killings by bloodthirsty mobs.

    Using decades-old maps of Delhi colonies, particularly of the killing fields like Trilokpuri in the trans-Yamuna belt, where many roads and colonies were not even marked, the Army was expected to end the violence, detect, evacuate and safely billet Sikh refugees in camps. Further complicating matters was the delineation of its jurisdiction. It merely had loose sanction to impose a curfew, but not enough force, or more importantly, the authorization to implement it.

    To his credit, PM Manmohan Singh attempted, in 2005, to mitigate his party’s role in the 1984 violence, declaring emotionally in Parliament that he bowed his head in shame over the massacres and apologized for them. But his party loyalties prevailed, when he declared that the horrific incidents needed to be viewed from a ‘wider perspective’ as past events could not be undone. He also failed miserably in ensuring that guilty Congressmen, like Kumar, were duly punished. This has only transpired two decades later.

    Compensation to pogrom survivors, too, fell prey to officialdom, which required the production of certificates and proof from an uncooperative, almost-hostile administration, loath to either register cases of murder, arson or looting or even to issue death certificates. It seemed that being a Sikh was reason enough to not comply and, consequently, hundreds of illiterate widows, who comprised the bulk of compensation seekers, simply added penury to their overwhelming losses. And, despite the grandiosely announced compensation schemes, hundreds of pogrom survivors were handed cheques for Rs 1,000 and dismissed.
    (Rahul Bedi is a New Delhi-based journalist reporting for over 30 years on strategic, military, and security matters for overseas journals)

  • 1984 anti-Sikh riots: Court asks Tytler’s counsel to file details of previous FIRs filed in Pul Bangash case

    1984 anti-Sikh riots: Court asks Tytler’s counsel to file details of previous FIRs filed in Pul Bangash case

    New Delhi (TIP) – The Rouse Avenue court has asked the counsel for Congress leader Jagdish Tytler to file a list of FIRs lodged by Delhi Police and Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) in the Pul Bangash gurdwara Sikh riots case and the outcome of the investigation and trials thereof. Tytler appeared through video conferencing (VC). The case is related to the killing of three Sikhs — Sardar Thakur Singh, Badal Singh and Gurcharan Singh — in Pul Bangash gurdwara in November 1, 1984. Congress leader Jagdish Tytler is named as an accused in the case. The CBI had filed a supplementary chargesheet against him in May 2023. Special judge Rakesh Syal adjourned the matter till January 9, 2024, after hearing the submission of defence counsel that the certified copies of previous chargesheets have not been received.
    Advocate Manu Sharma appeared for Tytler and urged the court to adjourn the matter as the certified copies of previous chargesheets and documents have not been received from the copying agency. He also submitted that as per the agency, they will start to prepare the copies post-winter vacations.
    Earlier, special judge Vikas Dhull was hearing the case before he was transferred.
    To court’s question on how many FIRs were lodged and how many chargesheets were filed, advocate Manu Sharma submitted that three FIRs were lodged by Delhi police. He also submitted that the Delhi police and CBI filed a total of four chargesheets. The counsel further submitted that initially the case was investigated by Delhi Police. In 2005, on the recommendation of Justice Nanavati Commission, the CBI registered a new case clubbing all three FIRs of Delhi police. Thereafter, the CBI filed a chargesheet against the other accused who was acquitted. CBI had filed a closure report for Tytler, however, in May this year, a chargesheet was filed against him, the counsel submitted.The CBI mentioned that during investigation, evidence came on record that on November 1, 1984, the accused instigated, incited and provoked the mob assembled at the gurdwara resulting in the killing of three Sikhs, apart from burning & looting of shops. Source: ANI

  • 1984 marks ‘one of the darkest years’ in modern Indian history: US Senator

    1984 marks ‘one of the darkest years’ in modern Indian history: US Senator

    WASHINGTON, D.C. (TIP): The anti-Sikh riots of 1984 mark “one of the darkest years” in modern Indian history, a US Senator has said, as he underlined the need to remember the atrocities committed against the Sikh community so that those responsible may be held accountable. Violence erupted in Delhi and other parts of the country after former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was assassinated by her Sikh bodyguards on October 31, 1984. Over 3,000 Sikhs were killed across India, mostly in the national capital. “1984 marks one of the darkest years in modern Indian history. The world watched as several violent incidents broke out among ethnic groups in India, with several notably targeting the Sikh community,” Senator Pat Toomey said on the Senate floor. “Today we are here to remember the tragedy that commenced on November 1, 1984, following decades of ethnic tension between Sikhs in the Punjab province and the central Indian Government,” he said recently.

    “To prevent future human rights abuses, we must recognize their past forms. We must remember the atrocities committed against Sikhs so that those responsible may be held accountable and that this type of tragedy is not repeated against the Sikh community or other communities across the globe,” Toomey, a Republican, said.

    Senator Toomey, who is a member of the American Sikh Congressional Caucus, said Sikhism traces its nearly 600-year history to the Punjab region of India. With nearly 30 million followers globally and 700,000 here in the US, Sikhism is one of the world’s major religions. Toomey said he has personally witnessed the spirit of Sikhs and has come to better understand the Sikh tradition that is founded on equality, respect, and peace.

    It is clear that the presence and contributions of Sikh communities have thoroughly enriched their neighborhoods across the country, he said. He also mentioned the community services rendered by Sikhs in the US during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Meanwhile, nine Indian-origin rights bodies here on Saturday published an advertisement in The New York Times to raise the alleged “religious persecution, discrimination and deadly mob violence” against minorities in India.

    The advertisement was published on the eve of the birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi. The nine bodies include the American Muslim Institution, Association of Indian Muslims of America Howard Cain, ICNA Council for Social Justice, Dalit Solidarity Forum Hindus for Human Rights, Indian American Muslim Council International Society for Peace and Justice and American Sikh Council. Each of them paid USD 1,000 for the advertisement.

  • Special team probing Kanpur’s 1984 anti-Sikh riots to send officials to Punjab

    Special team probing Kanpur’s 1984 anti-Sikh riots to send officials to Punjab

    New Delhi (TIP)- The Special Investigation Team (SIT), constituted to re-investigate the anti-Sikh riots in Kanpur following the assassination of former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, will send a team of three sub-inspectors and three constables to Punjab. The team will gather statements and further investigate some of the witnesses.

    If needed, witnesses will be brought to Uttar Pradesh and their statements recorded again, officials told India Today TV. Arrests will be made soon on the administration’s orders after the statements are recorded. The SIT has identified 67 accused in 11 cases so far. The SIT has handed over the list of the accused to the government. And they will be arrested as soon as the order is received, they said.

    127 Sikhs were killed in Kanpur in the riots of 1984. 40 cases were registered in Kanpur Nagar for murder, robbery and dacoity. The police had submitted the final report in 29 of these cases. Earlier, the SIT had recorded statements and searched the archives by meeting members of the victims’ families in different states. In these cases, 146 rioters were identified, of whom 79 are dead. Although, of the 67 alive, nearly 22 are over the age of 75 or are suffering from serious diseases, the officials added.

  • “Operation Blue Star – Counterbalancing Terror –  results in boomeranging horrible pain”

    By Ravi Batra

    The 1984 Operation Blue Star was the biggest internal security mission ever undertaken by the Indian Army. Operation Blue Star was Indira Gandhi’s solution to the haywire going law and order situation in Punjab.

    Operation Blue Star was carried out between June 1 and June 10, 1984, in Amritsar.-EDITOR

    Leadership requires making choices – picking between not “good” and “bad,” but “bad” and “worse.” This Op-Ed is aimed at policymakers – to abandon counterbalance as a pillar of statecraft, and it’s noisy and genie-out-of-the-bottle progeny: state-sponsored Terrorism. It doesn’t work, and is very painful at the bitter end. Being “right,” and winning by “right means” permits an end – as a civil “trial by jury” does daily in our courts even for losers. Nations, however, continue to exercise “might is right,” when it really never was – given its lingering “tail”.

    My takeaway: don’t use counterbalance; it’s sexy upfront, and painful as a nightmare divorce in the end. Recently, Kurds in Syria bear witness – as some of them became Terrorists against Turkey.

    The Akal Takht- the symbol of the supreme temporal power of the Sikhs, was destroyed in the Operation Bluestar. (Photo : CourtesyCentralSikhMuseum.com)

    The enemy of my enemy is my friend; or so goes the saying, lovingly followed by policymakers seeking a shortcut to victory for several millennia. Indeed, counterbalancing continues as a steady pillar of statecraft the world over. It matters not that ultimately it doesn’t work, and backfires with a painful boomerang.

    Recall President Ronald Reagan’s “Freedom Fighters” in Afghanistan who we trained and equipped to fight the then-USSR’s excursion in Afghanistan to an unhappy exit. Then, after 9/11, when we were in hot pursuit of its mastermind OBL and ended up in Afghanistan – our Freedom Fighters became the Taliban we were fighting against. 40 years and lots of blood and treasure we have spent, only to make a recent Jello gelatin flexible peace-deal with the Taliban, and then cause the local government’s twin executives to sign on after the fact to make it operational, all so we may extricate ourselves from a war we cannot lose, nor win by civilized standards in a place where our values are alien to the local ecosystem. My takeaway: don’t use counterbalance; it’s sexy upfront, and painful as a nightmare divorce in the end. Recently, Kurds in Syria bear witness – as some of them became Terrorists against Turkey.

    Well, let’s go back to 1971 – when the Blood Telegram sent from Dhaka was ignored in China-loving Richard Nixon’s Washington DC – and Indira Gandhi, Prime Minister of India, moved to save the remaining Hindus in now-Bangladesh from genocidal demise. India secured a striking victory in short order that exceeded expectations and was decisive to boot. Pakistan was unhappy, to state the obvious. Nations have found that sponsoring Terror is attractive – because it is what I call – war on the cheap. Pakistan enjoyed such sponsorship as a rejoinder. India’s Punjab and Kashmir border Pakistan, and cross-border Terror-support in Sikh-rich Punjab was easier, as Sikhism’s founder, Guru Nanak’s immortal roots remain in Pakistan – a matter of great importance even now while celebrating His 550th Birthday in Nankana Sahib, Lahore Pakistan via opening the visa-free Kartarpur Corridor – thanks to P. M. Imran Khan and P. M  Narendra Modi – which nations and people of goodwill celebrate.

    So after 1971, Pakistan’s cross-border sponsorship was for Khalistan to be born – perhaps, as a nation for a nation – with three Sikh leaders Shabeg Singh, Balbir Singh, and Amrik Singh turned separatists, who were allegedly taught tactics more familiar to Terror in Pakistan. As a result, India suffered a porous border and a porous state in Punjab and Kashmir, such that India’s sovereignty would be an afterthought if not stopped.  Mrs. Gandhi decided to fight fire with fire, and allegedly “sponsored” a genuine Sikh leader Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale. Ultimately, he and his armed supporters came under threat of arrest, being un-controllable by Delhi, and took refuge in the Golden Temple – the holiest Harmandir Sahib – and Operation Blue Star was born in June 1984 to turn back the hands of time and Statecraft’s expediently sexy counterbalance pillar. When first trying to peacefully end the stalemate and get the innocent pilgrims released failed over two days, as the separatists were armed with even Chinese-made grenade-launchers, on June 5th military force was initiated to forcibly evict Terrorists from the house of worship. That goal would be tough enough without religion being implicated; but attacking the holiest Sikh Gurdwara – a sanctuary – with 10,000 booted soldiers was successful in a military sense, but a failure by all other metrics. Harmandir Sahib was severely damaged, ancient scripts and artifacts forever lost in the “firefighting fire.” Thereafter, while the Indian Government rebuilt it, the Sikh community tore it down and rebuilt it afresh – perhaps, as we recently tore down our newly built embassy in Moscow and rebuilt it anew.

    The historic Ramgarhia Bunga damaged in the Operation Bluestar
    (Photo : Courtesy Central Sikh Museum.com)

    The price of counterbalancing Pakistan’s punishment – trying to create Khalistan for loss of her East Pakistan – was that Mrs. Gandhi was assassinated on October 31, 1984 by her favorite bodyguard, Beant Singh, and Satwant, both Sikhs – whom she insisted upon keeping. What followed was nothing short of a bloodbath – known as the Anti-Sikh Riots or worse – where even innocent Sikhs were hurt, injured and even killed and some members of the Indian Congress party were allegedly directing the Sikh-killings in an opportunistic manner – a stain that India has dealt with (and still has to remedy) as we did for interning loyal Japanese-Americans after Pearl Harbor some 40 years later.

    Recall in 1988, President Reagan signed the Civil Liberties Act to compensate more than 100,000 Japanese-Americans who were incarcerated in internment camps during World War II. The Law offered a formal apology and paid $20,000 in compensation to each surviving victim.

    Leadership requires making choices – picking between not “good” and “bad,” but “bad” and “worse.” This Op-Ed is aimed at policymakers – to abandon counterbalance as a pillar of statecraft, and it’s noisy and genie-out-of-the-bottle progeny: state-sponsored Terrorism. It doesn’t work, and is very painful at the bitter end. Being “right,” and winning by “right means” permits an end – as a civil “trial by jury” does daily in our courts even for losers. Nations, however, continue to exercise “might is right,” when it really never was – given its lingering “tail.” A lesson China will learn from its current collective and sequential miscalculations: Tibet, Uighurs, OBOR with AIIB, exporting Wuhan Virus (lab-engineered as it has the Spike Glycoprotein (S) spliced off the 2003 SARS Bat viruses and transplanted onto the surface of the AIDS virus in 2019 – see, my April 14, 2020 “Open Letter to POTUS et al” in public domain – recently re-confirmed by former head of MI6) as a global Pearl Harbor, with it’s cover-up, followed not by an apology and compensation, but added belligerence in South China Sea and Hong King, and inter alia, converting diplomacy, a channel most useful during disputes and war, and instead burning it by making diplomats act as a “Wolf Warrior” commando doing battle. That our Hollywood celebrates Chinese-Americans and China is starkly in contrast to the steady anti-American diet fed by Chinese Communist Party leadership to her people. That is both strategic, as it is tactical – something President Trump, Secretary Esper, Speaker Pelosi and Leader McConnell ought digest, as we too have our nation to defend in present time from folks we saw as friends, since Nixon, but who played us.

    Disclosure: I legally represented Indian National Congress and Mrs. Sonia Gandhi, merely a loving wife, mother and daughter-in-law in 1984, when they were sued by a so-called entity, Sikhs for Justice, under the Alien Tort Claims Act in United States Federal Courts in New York – SDNY and EDNY. I successfully argued that India, where all events occurred and all actors reside, was ineligible for US courts to exercise extra-territoriality and it was for India to remedy this stain. The lofty U. S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals issued two orders in 2014 and 2015, respectively, agreeing to dismiss the cases pursuant to US law. Thereafter, Rahul Gandhi, adopting my legal filings, gave an interview to Arnab Goswami confirming for the first time that “some” Congressmen were complicit in misconduct. SFJ’s subsequent cases against then-PM Manmohan Singh and PM Narendra Modi were dismissed, based upon the precedents I secured, along with application of the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act, as Prime Ministers, as head of government, are so entitled – which neither INC or INC President Sonia Gandhi was so entitled.  Now, SFJ is out of the media-rich harassing litigation, but, allegedly, based upon reports, may be subject to Foreign Agent Registration Act given its foreign supporters.”

    (The author is a senior attorney and Chair, National Advisory Council South Asian Affairs. He can be reached at ravi@ravibatralaw.com)

     

  • Eminent Ophthalmologist VK Raju honored by Egyptian Ophthalmology Society

    Eminent Ophthalmologist VK Raju honored by Egyptian Ophthalmology Society

    CAIRO (TIP): Dr. VK Raju, an eminent ophthalmologist based in Morgan Town, West Virginia, USA was invited to Cairo by the Egyptian Ophthalmology Society to speak on childhood blindness. He lectured on difficult cataract surgery, prevention of blindness in premature children. The condition is called ROP (retinopathy of prematurity). If premature babies are given too much oxygen, it can be harmful. It leads to bleeding in the eye and causes permanent blindness. The good news is it can be prevented by laser treatment. Early recognition is the key.

    Dr. Raju who is Founder and President of the Eye Foundation of America is a passionate crusader for prevention of avoidable childhood blindness. His passion takes him to many parts of the world, particularly to his country of origin India where he has set up a hospital and eye institute in Rajahmundry, Andhra Pradesh. At the Goutami Eye Institute, Rajahmundry, a dedicated staff serves a large community, particularly rural.

    Dr. VK Raju is internationally recognized and has been honored by many organizations. Only this January, Rotary Club of Calcutta, the oldest Rotary club, at their centenary celebrations, honored Dr. Raju for his tremendous contribution.

  • No More 1947; no more 1984; no more 2002; no more 2020

    13000 SOS calls made over 4 days of communal violence raging in some parts of Delhi, and no response from 85000 strong Delhi Police force to come to the aid of the victims. The result: 42 lives snuffed out. Over 350 injured. Property worth thousands of crores destroyed. And relationships ruptured, may be, beyond repair.

    Reminds one of 1984 when thousands of Sikhs made frantic calls without any response from police. The result, over 10,000 lost their lives. Hundreds of women were raped. Thousands were injured.

    Had the police done their duty in 1984, the barbaric and tragic incident could have been avoided, and precious lives saved.

    The pattern was repeated in 2002 when in Gujarat, communal violence erupted taking a heavy toll of life and property. Police even there preferred to look the other way while the arsonists and perpetrators of violence continued to loot and kill without a finger being raised by the police.

    It has happened again, in Delhi where over three to four days, goons went around, beating and killing, damaging property right under the nose of the police. Reports say, at places, police actively connived with the goons.

    So, the 1984 and 2002 pattern were repeated in 2020. Is it a coincidence that the police in Delhi in 1984 and in 2020 conducted itself in a similar fashion as police did in Gujarat in 2002? Are the police all across the country trained that way? Or, is it the dharma of the police to obey, not the law, but those who control political power?

    Is it a coincidence that 2002 Gujarat communal violence took place under the duo of Narendra Modi and Amit Shah when they  were Chief Minister and Home Minister respectively of the State, and the 2020 Delhi communal violence took  place under the same team with one being the Prime Minister and the other being the Home Minister?  It is an interesting coincidence.

    However, getting back to the conduct of police in Delhi, it is quite strange that the High Court had to pull up police to move forward in cases of hate speech which surely provoked people into violence. Those who make provocative statements and instigate people to communal violence are guilty of creating conditions of civil war and destabilizing the nation, and as such, should be treated as traitors.

    India has suffered enough. Indians have suffered enough from 1947 through 1984 and 2002. Already, another wound has been inflicted in the body of the nation in the form of recent Delhi Communal clashes. Every time there is a communal clash it is a stab in the heart of Mother India. Let those who love Mother India desist from any further crimes against their mother.

    Let us pledge today: “No more 1947; no more 1984; no more 2002 and no more 2020.”