Friday, June 26, 2026
ADVT 
International

Make Operation Bluestar-Related Files Public, Orders UK Judge

IANS, 12 Jun, 2018 10:43 AM
    A UK judge has ordered the declassification of documents that are expected to shed further light on Britain's involvement in Operation Bluestar in 1984, dismissing the British government's argument that the move could damage diplomatic ties with India.
     
     
    Judge Murray Shanks, who presided over a three-day hearing of the First Tier Tribunal (Information Rights) in London in March, ruled on Monday that a majority of the files relating to the period must be made public and rejected the UK government's argument that declassifying the Downing Street papers would damage diplomatic ties with India.
     
     
    The judge, however, did accept that one file marked "India: Political", from the UK's Joint Intelligence Committee (JIC), could contain information that relates to British spy agencies MI5, MI6 and GCHQ (Government Communications Headquarters) and therefore the Cabinet Office was entitled to rely on a technicality that exempts such material from the Freedom of Information (FOI) request appeal.
     
     
    "We recognise that the period we are concerned with was a highly sensitive one in India's recent history and the strength of feeling it continues to evoke it should also be remembered that the fact that 30 years has gone by is bound to have reduced any prejudice that may have resulted from release of the withheld material," the judgment notes.
     
     
     
     
    The FOI appeal was handled by KRW Law on behalf of freelance journalist Phil Miller, who has been investigating the exact nature of the then Margaret Thatcher-led government's assistance to the Indian Army operation on Golden Temple in Amritsar.
     
     
    In 2014, UK government documents declassified under the 30-year rule to make such material public had revealed that British military advice was given to Indian forces prior to Operation Bluestar. 
     
     
    Then British Prime Minister David Cameron had ordered a review into this discovery, named as the Heywood Review, which led to a statement in Parliament declaring that Britain's role had been purely "advisory" and the advice provided by the country's Special Air Service (SAS) had "limited impact in practice".
     
     
    But Miller, the author of 'Sacrificing Sikhs: The need for an investigation' report released last year, says only "full transparency" would reveal the exact nature of Britain's involvement. 
     
     
    "After nearly four years of asking for disclosure of these files, it is a great victory for a judge to rule that more transparency would not harm diplomatic ties or risk national security," said Miller, who is disappointed that one file has been left out due to a "loophole" relating to the country's intelligence agencies.
     
     
     
     
    "It is no wonder that many in the Sikh community are calling for a public inquiry, as only that would have the power to disclose all relevant material," he added.
     
     
    The files that must now be released in full include papers on UK-India relations from 1983 to 1985 - covering a meeting between Thatcher and Indira Gandhi's adviser, L.K. Jha, the situation in Punjab, Sikh activities and the assassination of Gandhi in October 1984. 
     
     
    Judge Shanks dismissed the UK government's claim that declassifying these papers would harm relations with India and said "it is worth noting that we have heard no evidence of any adverse reaction from the Indian government resulting from the events of January and February 2014", referring to the Heywood Review.
     
     
    The UK Cabinet Office has been given time until July 11 to appeal against the First Tier Tribunal's decision. Alternatively, it must make the relevant documents available to Miller for his research by July 12.
     
     
    The Cabinet Office said it would be issue its response in due course.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Twitter Can't Stop Laughing As Pakistan, China Launch 'RANDI' Think Tank

    Twitter Can't Stop Laughing As Pakistan, China Launch 'RANDI' Think Tank
    Dedicated to research on the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, a $46 billion dollar plan linking China’s restive west to the Arabian Sea, the newly inaugurated Research and Development International (RANDI) organisation has been widely pilloried because its acronym sounds like “whore” in Urdu and Hindi

    Twitter Can't Stop Laughing As Pakistan, China Launch 'RANDI' Think Tank

    Watch: Pakistani Taliban Announces Successful Test-Fire Of Missile 'Umar 1'

    Watch: Pakistani Taliban Announces Successful Test-Fire Of Missile 'Umar 1'
    As Pakistan was Tuesday celebrating Chinese investments worth $46 billion in the country, the militant Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) reported it has successfully test-fired its first indigenously developed missile. 

    Watch: Pakistani Taliban Announces Successful Test-Fire Of Missile 'Umar 1'

    British City Council Refuses Indian Food At Fest Because It's Not 'English-Themed'

    British City Council Refuses Indian Food At Fest Because It's Not 'English-Themed'
    A city council in Britain told an Indian-origin woman that she could not run a food stall during a St George's Day event as it wanted only English food.

    British City Council Refuses Indian Food At Fest Because It's Not 'English-Themed'

    Five Arrested In Australia For Alleged Terror Plot

    Five Arrested In Australia For Alleged Terror Plot
    The two men, both 18, were charged with conspiring to plan a terror act and will appear in the Melbourne magistrate's court later in the day.

    Five Arrested In Australia For Alleged Terror Plot

    This Indian-American Leads Hillary Clinton's Agenda Team

    This Indian-American Leads Hillary Clinton's Agenda Team
    Making her second presidential run, Hillary Clinton has set up a three person team of senior policy advisers headed by Indian-American Maya Harris, a former senior fellow at the Center for American Progress.

    This Indian-American Leads Hillary Clinton's Agenda Team

    Raja Rajeswari Becomes New York's First Indian-American Judge

    Raja Rajeswari Becomes New York's First Indian-American Judge
    Chennai born Raja Rajeswari, who came to America when she was 16, has become the first person of Indian descent to be named as a criminal court judge in New York City.

    Raja Rajeswari Becomes New York's First Indian-American Judge