Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
India

Four arrested in connection with 1984 riots

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 Jun, 2022 11:05 AM
  • Four arrested in connection with 1984 riots

Kanpur (UP), June 15 (IANS) A Special Investigation Team (SIT), formed to investigate the 1984 anti-Sikh riots in Delhi, has arrested four accused from Ghatampur area Kanpur Nagar district.

DIG Balendu Bhushan, who heads the SIT, informed that more arrests will soon be made in the case.

According to him, the arrested accused have been identified as Saifullah Khan, 64, Vijay Narain Singh, 62, Yogendra Singh, 65, and Abdul Rahman, 65.

According to the SIT, other accused involved in the riots are currently under the scanner.

The arrests were made in connection with 1984 anti-Sikh riots that broke out in Delhi in the aftermath of the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's assassination.

The SIT was formed three years back in 2019 by the Union Ministry to reopen seven 1984 anti-Sikh riot cases, where the accused were either acquitted or the trial closed.

Notably, the SIT, in its investigation, has identified 94 accused in the 1984 Sikh riots, out of which 74 people are alive.

SIT DIG Balendu Bhushan said, "This is an old case from 1984. Because this is an old case, the SIT faced difficulties in nabbing the accused. We have been probing for three years and collecting information. Based on the investigation, more than 70 people were identified, of which four have been arrested."

MORE India ARTICLES

Wanted to give expensive gift to girlfriend, says i-Phone thief

Wanted to give expensive gift to girlfriend, says i-Phone thief
Furnishing details about the robbery, a police official said that the incident took place on November 23 when the accused, along with another man, robbed an Apple iPhone after putting a knife on the victim's neck when he was crossing a park in western Delhi.

Wanted to give expensive gift to girlfriend, says i-Phone thief

Confirmation of Omicron cases in India not unexpected: WHO

Confirmation of Omicron cases in India not unexpected: WHO
The detection of two cases of Omicron, the latest variant of Covid-19, in Karnataka was not unexpected in view of the interconnected world that people live in, Poonam Khetrapal Singh, Regional Director, WHO South-East Asia, said on Thursday.

Confirmation of Omicron cases in India not unexpected: WHO

Punjab exempts 1.50 lakh cases of traders from assessment

Punjab exempts 1.50 lakh cases of traders from assessment
In a major reprieve to traders ahead of the assembly polls, the Punjab Cabinet on Wednesday decided to exempt about 1.50 lakh cases from assessment related to cases of 'C' form from 2014-15 to 2017-18.

Punjab exempts 1.50 lakh cases of traders from assessment

SAD leader Manjinder Singh Sirsa joins BJP

SAD leader Manjinder Singh Sirsa joins BJP
 Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) leader Manjinder Singh Sirsa on Wednesday joined the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), ahead of the next year's Punjab Assembly elections.

SAD leader Manjinder Singh Sirsa joins BJP

Farmers blasts govt's attempt to 'divide' unions, say way forward decision on Dec 4

Farmers blasts govt's attempt to 'divide' unions, say way forward decision on Dec 4
Stating that the BJP government should stop attempting to divide farmers even at this stage - two days after the three farm laws were repealed in the Parliament, the Samyukt Kisan Morcha on Wednesday on condemned the government's statement that it does not have data about farmers' death.

Farmers blasts govt's attempt to 'divide' unions, say way forward decision on Dec 4

Bhopal gas tragedy: A careless UCIL, but healthcare system during Covid still overburdened

Bhopal gas tragedy: A careless UCIL, but healthcare system during Covid still overburdened
Leaked toxic Methyl IsoCyanate (MIC) gas from the Union Carbide of India Ltd (UCIL) factory started affecting the residents of Madhya Pradesh capital city Bhopal, especially those residing in the southeast direction from the factory, around 2 a.m. on the intervening night of December 2 and 3 in 1984. 

Bhopal gas tragedy: A careless UCIL, but healthcare system during Covid still overburdened