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Sikh Man Asked To Take Off Kirpan, Deboard Bus In Auckland

IANS, 26 Jul, 2017 11:59 AM
  • Sikh Man Asked To Take Off Kirpan, Deboard Bus In Auckland

A Sikh man in Australia was asked to take off his kirpan and “get out” of a bus when a passenger called police in panic after seeing the ceremonial knife, a media report said on Wednesday.

 

Police boarded a busy commuter bus in Auckland on Tuesday after a passenger was seen carrying a ceremonial knife, traditionally worn by Sikhs.

 

“We looked out the window and we could see and the police car behind us with sirens blaring and armed men all around us. One policeman stormed into the bus with a gun in his hand and said to the guy, ‘Get your hands up so we can see them and get out of the bus’,” New Zealand Herald quoted a witness as saying.

 

The passenger, thought to be in his 20s, was wearing a turban and had a long, curved “sword-like” kirpan strapped behind his back on the left side, which the police removed, said the witness.

 

A police spokeswoman said officers were called after a member of the public reported seeing a kirpan.

 

She said the armed offenders’ squad was not sent and the officers were not armed.

 

“Police spoke with the man, who is a Sikh.” “He was in possession of a ceremonial kirpan, which is customary for Sikhs. The man, who is lawfully living in New Zealand, was polite and cooperative and no further action was taken,” the report said.

 

The spokeswoman said the ceremonial kirpan was not confiscated.

 

New Zealand National Party MP Kanwaljit Singh Bakshi has a member’s bill in the Parliamentary ballot which, if drawn and passed, would permit the Sikh community to carry a kirpan under certain guidelines. 
 
 
 
The leader has earlier mentioned about the need of a legislation around ceremonial daggers. A baptised Sikh has five articles of faith and the kirpan is one of them, Bakshi said.
 
 
 
 
 
 
The bill if passed, will ensure that the kirpan carried shouldn’t be more than 10 cm and it should be worn under clothing. As per the bill, those who opt for kirpan will also have to wear the other four articles of faith – kesh (uncut long hair), kanga (a comb), kara (an iron bracelet), and kachehra (under shorts).
 
 
 
When Bakshi was elected in 2008, he informed the then Speaker of the House, Lockwood Smith, that he carried a kirpan. He was allowed to wear it in Parliament and carry it on planes. “A kirpan is usually worn inside one’s attire and normally is not exposed. It is blunt and doesn’t have a sharp edge.”
 
 

Australia is home to more than 72,000 Sikh, a population that is expected to rise in this year’s census.

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