Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
India

Set Up SIT For 1984 Sikh 'Genocide', Badal Asks Modi

Darpan News Desk IANS, 01 Feb, 2015 03:15 PM
    Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal Sunday sought the personal intervention of Prime Minister Narendra Modi in constituting a Special Investigation Team (SIT) to probe all cases related to the 1984 anti-Sikh riots.
     
    In a letter to Modi, Badal said the "genocide" of Sikhs was a "pre-planned" incident at the behest of Congress leaders.
     
    Badal urged the central government to take an immediate call on the recommendations of the Justice (retd) G.P. Mathur panel, constituted by the Centre in December last year, to re-investigate several cases related to anti-Sikh violence that broke out in November 1984 after the assassination of then prime minister Indira Gandhi.
     
    The chief minister said the Shiromani Akali Dal has been struggling to get justice for the victims of the 1984 riots in Delhi and other parts of the country.
     
    He said that on the Akali Dal's demand, the Justice Mathur panel was constituted in December 2014, by the central government to examine the possibility of setting up of an SIT for re-investigating the 1984 'genocide'.
     
    Badal said the panel had, in its 45-page report, suggested setting up of an SIT.
     
    Demanding re-investigation of many cases where crucial evidence was overlooked and cases were closed by Delhi Police even without sending them to courts, Badal said all such cases needed to be re-opened.
     
    Accusing the previous Congress-led government at the Centre and in Delhi of pushing the anti-Sikh riots cases under the carpet, Badal said the recommendations of the Mathur panel had given new hope to victims of the riots.
     
    "By doing so, the government of India will assuage the bruised psyche of the Sikh community and help them get justice," Badal said.
     
    Hundreds of Sikhs were targeted and killed in Delhi and other places across India by mobs in the aftermath of Indira Gandhi's assassination by her two Sikh security personnel in October 1984.
     
    Many Congress leaders were accused of instigating mobs to target Sikhs during the riots.
     
    Meanwhile, an Akali Dal delegation Sunday met Home Minister Rajnath Singh and demanded an SIT to probe the 1984 riots as per recommendations of the committee.
     
    Stating that justice delayed was justice denied, party leader and Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Committee chief Manjit Singh G.K. said: "We met the home minister and told him that the government should act on the recommendations of the Justice Mathur report and the SIT must be constituted with immediate effect."
     
    He said Rajnath Singh assured them that justice will be done.
     
    However, the Aam Aadmi Party attacked the government and described it as a political gimmick to woo voters ahead of the polls.
     
    AAP leader H.S. Phoolka said if it was true, the findings of the retired Supreme Court judge were a severe indictment of the BJP-led government which has continued to stall the SIT ordered by then chief minister Arvind Kejriwal in February 2014.
     
    "The government has to explain to the citizens of the country and the victims why it continued to stall this SIT for these nine months," he asked.
     
    "Badal continued to shift his stand on the SIT. In February 2014, he said there was no need of the SIT. When the NDA came to power, he said the SIT should be Supreme Court-monitored and later said there was no need of an SIT and a commission should be appointed."
     
    He said the findings of the Mathur panel were a severe indictment of Badal also.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Nawaz Sharif's India visit: Sand artist creates image on peace

    Nawaz Sharif's India visit: Sand artist creates image on peace
    Sand artist Sudarsan Pattnaik Sunday created a sand sculpture on peace in Odisha ahead of Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's visit to India.

    Nawaz Sharif's India visit: Sand artist creates image on peace

    It's official: Modi to merge ministries, Small, compact Cabinet shaping up

    It's official: Modi to merge ministries, Small, compact Cabinet shaping up
    A small and compact cabinet under Narendra Modi appeared to be taking final shape Sunday, with BJP leaders Rajnath Singh, Arun Jaitley, and Sushma Swaraj likely to get the top posts, according to party sources.

    It's official: Modi to merge ministries, Small, compact Cabinet shaping up

    AAP to think small again: Focus on Delhi, may not contest Haryana

    AAP to think small again: Focus on Delhi, may not contest Haryana
    Stung by its rout in the general election, where it won only four out of 440 Lok Sabha seats it contested, all of them from Punjab, the AAP is now back to thinking small and may not contest assembly elections in Haryana scheduled for this October.

    AAP to think small again: Focus on Delhi, may not contest Haryana

    History will be made Monday as Narendrabhai Damodardas Modi takes oath

    History will be made Monday as Narendrabhai Damodardas Modi takes oath
    It would be history in the making, in more senses than one. A man who once helped his family make ends meet by vending tea at a railway station in between his classes, and who once wandered around the country to find his spiritual moorings, will take his oath as India's 14th prime minister

    History will be made Monday as Narendrabhai Damodardas Modi takes oath

    Shazia Ilmi, Capt.Gopinath quit AAP, hit out at Arvind Kejriwal

    Shazia Ilmi, Capt.Gopinath quit AAP, hit out at Arvind Kejriwal
     In a double whammy for the Aam Aadmi Party, two of its key leaders - Shazia Ilmi and G.R. Gopinath - Saturday quit the party and lashed out at its chief Arvind Kejriwal's policies and attitude.

    Shazia Ilmi, Capt.Gopinath quit AAP, hit out at Arvind Kejriwal

    Sonia asks partymen not to bicker in public, learn lessons from rout

    Sonia asks partymen not to bicker in public, learn lessons from rout
    Congress president Sonia Gandhi, re-elected chairperson of Congress Parliamentary Party (CPP)Saturday, asked party leaders not to indulge in "public acrimony" over the party's worst Lok Sabha results for which appropriate lessons need to be learnt.

    Sonia asks partymen not to bicker in public, learn lessons from rout