Sunday, May 5, 2024
ADVT 
India

New SIT, Headed by Justice SN Dhingra, to Supervise Probe in 186 Anti-Sikh Riot Cases Set Up

Darpan News Desk IANS, 11 Jan, 2018 12:51 PM
    The Supreme Court on Thursday set up a three-member special investigation team (SIT) headed by former Delhi High Court judge Justice S N Dhingra to supervise further probe into 186 anti-Sikh riot cases.
     
     
    Besides Justice Dhingra, serving IPS officer Abhishek Dular and retired IG rank officer Rajdeep Singh would be part of the SIT, which has been asked by a Bench headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra to submit its status report in two months.
     
     
    The matter would be heard next on March 19.
     
     
    Dhingra was the judge when punishments were handed out in 1990s to the accused of the Trilokpuri massacre of 1984. Kishori Lal, dubbed as the ‘butcher of Trilokpuri’, was among those sentenced by Dhingra.
     
     
    He was recently in the news for heading a one-man panel that probed Haryana land scam allegedly involving Robert Vadra, the son-in-law UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi.
     
     
    The top court had yesterday held that the previous SIT had not carried out further probe into these 186 cases in which closure reports were filed, and directed setting up of a fresh SIT comprising a former high court judge and two police officers.
     
     
     
     
    Large-scale riots had broken out in the national capital in the aftermath of the assassination of then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi by two Sikh security guards on the morning of October 31, 1984. The violence had claimed 2,733 lives in Delhi alone.
     
     
    The Bench, also comprising Justices A M Khanwilkar and D Y Chandrachud, had yesterday said "we have perused the report of the Supervisory Committee. On perusal of the same, we find that the SIT has not done further investigation in respect of 186 cases."
     
     
    It had said that with regard to the nature of cases, "it would be appropriate that a fresh SIT should be constituted for carrying on the further investigation".
     
     
    The earlier supervisory body, which had submitted its final report, had comprised former apex court judges Justice J M Panchal and Justice K S P Radhakrishnan.
     
     
    On August 16 last year, the apex court had appointed the supervisory panel to examine the SIT's decision to close 241 cases in the 1984 anti-Sikh riots matter.
     
     
    The Centre had said that out of 250 riots cases, which were probed by the SIT, closure reports were filed in 241.
     
     
    It had said nine cases were still being investigated by the SIT and two being probed by the CBI.
     
     
    The apex court had on March 24, 2017, asked the Centre to place before it the files pertaining to the 199 anti-Sikh riots cases which the SIT set up earlier by the Home Ministry had decided to close.
     
     
    The SIT was headed by Pramod Asthana, an IPS officer of 1986 batch, and had Rakesh Kapoor, a retired district and sessions judge, and Kumar Gyanesh, an additional deputy commissioner of Delhi Police, as its members.
     
     
    Petitioner S Gurlad Singh Kahlon had earlier told the Bench that a total of 293 riot-related cases were taken up for scrutiny by the earlier SIT, which had decided to close 199 of them after scrutiny.
     
     
    Kahlon, a member of the Delhi Sikh Gurudwara Management Committee, had sought the court's direction for setting up another SIT to ensure speedy justice to the riot victims. 

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Father Of Alan Thicke Faces Allegations He Groped Patient's Breasts

    Father Of Alan Thicke Faces Allegations He Groped Patient's Breasts
    An Ontario doctor identified as the father of the late TV star Alan Thicke will face a disciplinary hearing on allegations that he sexually abused a patient who came to him for a pilot's medical exam more than two decades ago.

    Father Of Alan Thicke Faces Allegations He Groped Patient's Breasts

    Aadhaar FIR: Are We Living In Banana Republic? Asks Shatrughan Sinha

    BJP MP Shatrughan Sinha on Monday wondered if the people of the country were living in a “banana republic”, saying a journalist who did a story to highlight the misuse of Aadhaar details was being hauled up for reporting an “alleged truth”.

    Aadhaar FIR: Are We Living In Banana Republic? Asks Shatrughan Sinha

    B.C. Teen Creating App, Summer Camp To Revive First Nations Language

    B.C. Teen Creating App, Summer Camp To Revive First Nations Language
    Tessa Erickson of the Nak'azdli Whut'en First Nation is creating an app and organizing a summer camp to help get younger people in her central B.C. community speaking the Nak'azdli dialect of the Dakelh language.

    B.C. Teen Creating App, Summer Camp To Revive First Nations Language

    Boy Dies After Being Hit By Sword At Engagement Function

    Boy Dies After Being Hit By Sword At Engagement Function
    The sword accidentally hit Hameed, who was also dancing at the event.

    Boy Dies After Being Hit By Sword At Engagement Function

    Disappointed Veterans Take Aim At Liberal Government's Pension-for-life Plan

    Disappointed Veterans Take Aim At Liberal Government's Pension-for-life Plan
    OTTAWA — The Trudeau government enters the second half of its mandate facing anger and frustration from Canadian military veterans over its recently announced pension scheme for those injured in uniform.

    Disappointed Veterans Take Aim At Liberal Government's Pension-for-life Plan

    White House Staffers Don't Question Trump's Mental Stability, Says Nikki Haley

    Nikki Haley's defence of Donald Trump comes after the publication of the book titled "Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House" by journalist Michael Wolff.

    White House Staffers Don't Question Trump's Mental Stability, Says Nikki Haley