Thursday, April 9, 2026
ADVT 
India

SFJ referendum campaign barely visible in the West

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Dec, 2021 11:46 AM
  • SFJ referendum campaign barely visible in the West

New Delhi, Dec 16 (IANS) For most of the world, the Sikhs for Justice (SFJ) referendum campaign is barely visible – a mere curiosity in the backwaters of the internet, wrote Terry Milewski in an article for Gateway House.

It is simply not news – although it might be if it were banned in the West, not just in India. For Canada, Britain and the US, freedom of speech is the rule and there's been no effort to silence SFJ. Although this irritates Indian authorities, Western politicians do not pay any price for tolerating speech which voters hardly notice, Milewski said.

Rather, what is missing in the West is not Indian-style censorship, but loud and public disapproval by political and community leaders. They also have freedom of speech – but they rarely use it, even to denounce the veneration of Talwinder Parmar in Canada, where some key electoral districts hang in the balance. Traditional vote-bank politics leads all parties to avoid even mild criticism of Khalistani propaganda, the article said.

US-based separatist group Sikhs for Justice (SFJ) head Gurpatwant Singh Pannun has shifted his aim to Amarinder Singh's successor as Chief Minister of Punjab, Charanjit Channi.

The SFJ video thunders a warning, leaning heavily on reminders of the murder of CM Beant Singh, with pictures of the victim and the wreckage of his car to reinforce the message, wrote Terry Milewski in an article for Gateway House.

Pannun has recently produced and starred in two menacing videos aimed at the former and current Chief Ministers of Punjab – Capt Amarinder Singh and Charanjit Singh Channi – both staunch opponents of the Khalistan movement.

The first video, entitled "I Am Dilawar," was released on the anniversary of a 1995 suicide bombing by Dilawar Singh, who killed Chief Minister Beant Singh, along with sixteen bystanders. Illustrated with grim scenes of the wreckage of Beant Singh's car, the video features closeups of a portrait of Capt Amarinder being shot in the face by an off-screen gunman. Any crackdown on Khalistanis, the video warns, will have consequences – perhaps the same fate that befell Beant Singh: "Capt Amarinder is following the footsteps of slain CM Beant", as per the article.

Such videos are posted and re-posted on a sprawling network of websites and Facebook pages which animate a frenetic game of whack-a-mole, as Indian authorities manage to shut one down, only to see another pop up in its place. This allows a page to run Sikhs for Justice material for years, linking to an SFJ home page and using the SFJ name and logo, only to be disowned as unofficial if trouble arises, Milewski said.

But wherever the content appears, the veneration of terrorist martyrs is a constant. In yet another video, Pannun shakes his finger at the camera and promises to give new iPhones to anyone who flies the Khalistan flag in honour of "Shaheed" Beant Singh, one of the bodyguards who shot Indira Gandhi.

Despite such provocative content, Sikhs for Justice has exploited Facebook's willingness to keep its internet presence alive in the face of the Indian government's attempts to suppress it, the article said.

MORE India ARTICLES

COVID19 continues to pose a threat for India with a major oxygen shortage, hospitals go to court

COVID19 continues to pose a threat for India with a major oxygen shortage, hospitals go to court
There is desparate struggle for oxygen and there is a major shortage of hospital beds. Crematoriums and morgues are packed and can't keep up with the constant flow of corpses coming in. 

COVID19 continues to pose a threat for India with a major oxygen shortage, hospitals go to court

Shortage of oxygen cylinders and beds continues to take a toll on India as it grapples with COVID19

Shortage of oxygen cylinders and beds continues to take a toll on India as it grapples with COVID19
Social media is flooded with desparate pleas from people for oxygen for their loved ones while others have no option but to circle hospitals in the capital Delhi while begging for a bed. 

Shortage of oxygen cylinders and beds continues to take a toll on India as it grapples with COVID19

Bail granted to Deep Sidhu in relation to Republic Day violence at the Red Fort

Bail granted to Deep Sidhu in relation to Republic Day violence at the Red Fort
Manjinder Singh Sirsa, President of the Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management committee & National Spokesman of the Akali Dal shared a celebratory tweet on Sidhu's release along with pictures and video on Instagram.

Bail granted to Deep Sidhu in relation to Republic Day violence at the Red Fort

India in need of dire oxygen supply as the COVID19 pandemic wreaks havoc on the country

India in need of dire oxygen supply as the COVID19 pandemic wreaks havoc on the country
The situation has gotten so dire that not only are Indian doctors begging for oxygen but the hospitals are filling up with COVID19 positive patients so fast that people have been dying on the pavement outside a well known hospital in the capital Delhi. 

India in need of dire oxygen supply as the COVID19 pandemic wreaks havoc on the country

Farmers stance firm with agriculture laws being repealed, farmers return to Delhi to protest

Farmers stance firm with agriculture laws being repealed, farmers return to Delhi to protest
The SKM has also alleged that the government instead of strengthening the farm sector is creating cheap labour in metropolitan areas through an agricultural crisis. 

Farmers stance firm with agriculture laws being repealed, farmers return to Delhi to protest

Students deal with confusion at Amritsar Airport over direct flight to Toronto

Students deal with confusion at Amritsar Airport over direct flight to Toronto
The students didn't appreciate the annoucement as it would mean additional expenses and adhering to COVID19 protocol during their stay in Dubai.

Students deal with confusion at Amritsar Airport over direct flight to Toronto