Sunday, June 14, 2026
ADVT 
National

1984 Sikh Genocide Motion Defeated In Ontario

Darpan News Desk , 03 Jun, 2016 10:18 AM
  • 1984 Sikh Genocide Motion Defeated In Ontario
On June 2nd in the Legislature, Deputy Leader for Ontario’s NDP Jagmeet Singh’s motion calling on the Ontario Government to formally recognize the November 1984 state organized violence perpetrated against Sikhs throughout India as genocide was debated and voted down by the Ontario Liberal Government.
 
“Today, the liberals turned their back on human rights, social justice, reconciliation and healing. They turned their back not only on Sikhs but every Hindu and Muslim family that risked their lives to shelter their Sikh neighbours,” the MPP from Bramalea-Gore-Malton said following today’s devastating vote.
 
Despite receiving support from both the NDP and Progressive Conservative caucuses, Ontario's Liberal Government defeated the motion 40 to 22.
 
 
“It is important to clarify the misconception that the violence against Sikhs was communal in nature. This could not be further from the truth,” Singh said to kick off the debate.
 
Under McGuinty the Liberals welcomed Kamal Nath an alleged perpetrator of Genocide, Kathleen Wynne was a part of these meetings.
 
“Ontario is a place where people see democracy as a way to heal from the wounds of the past, but today Kathleen Wynne and the Liberals denied this opportunity to Sikhs,” Singh explained. 
 
“It’s unfortunate that the Liberal Government does not understand the importance of accurately describing the violence as a genocide, which works to remove the blame from innocent members of the community and instead places the blame squarely on those who organized this atrocity.”
 
 
The current Indian Government's own Home Minister, Rajnath Singh, described the atrocious anti-Sikh violence in 1984 as Genocide, citing that several people who took part in and had a role in the carnage were yet to be punished. 
 
Other cities in North America that have also recognize the events of November 1984 as a genocide include the City of Stockton, California, Kerman City, California, Bakersfield, California and Harvey, Cook county Illinois. The California State Assembly passed a resolution denouncing the November 1984 violence as a pogrom and the Delhi State Assembly passed a resolution denouncing it as a massacre. 
 
Former Justice of the Indian Supreme Court, author of the Nanavati Commission Report stated that the killing of Sikhs was planned and organized. Human rights organizations have also reported that the voter lists were used to identify and target Sikh businesses and homes.
 
 
“While, we cannot change the horrific events of 1984, as Members of this Legislature, we had an opportunity to clear misconceptions which divide the community” Singh explained.
 
“The first step to healing and reconciliation is to recognize the harm that was committed and that’s what this motion, if passed would have done.”
 
WSO President Mukhbir Singh said today, "we are deeply disappointed by the defeat of the motion recognizing the events of November 1984 as a genocide.  The ongoing use of the term '1984 anti-Sikh riots' to describe the events of November 1984 is a distortion and wrongly implies unorganized communal violence.  The motion introduced by MPP Jagmeet Singh was an important opportunity to hold those who planned and organized the massacres responsible and an opportunity for reconciliation and justice."
 
 
WSO Ontario VP Prabmeet Singh Sarkaria said, "It's highly unfortunate that the Ontario Liberal Party worked to defeat a motion of such importance and significance to the Sikh community. Even Indian Union Home Minister, Rajnath Singh, has acknowledged that the events of November 1984 were genocide.  By passing today's motion, Ontario could have played an important role in moving this issue forward and in the pursuit of truth and justice for the victims."
 
The Ontario Government would have been the first legislative assembly to formally call the events of November 1984 a genocide in the world.

MORE National ARTICLES

Tata Steel To Sell U.K. Plants: Crisis As Threat Of 40000 Job Losses Looms

Tata Steel To Sell U.K. Plants: Crisis As Threat Of 40000 Job Losses Looms
Prime Minister David Cameron held a crisis meeting at 10 Downing St., and said the government would do "everything it can" to keep steelmaking in Britain.

Tata Steel To Sell U.K. Plants: Crisis As Threat Of 40000 Job Losses Looms

Winnipeg Man Creates Social Media Accounts With Real Police Officer's Name, Busted

  Police say they received multiple complaints from across North America about a police officer inappropriately using social media and other online forums.

Winnipeg Man Creates Social Media Accounts With Real Police Officer's Name, Busted

Aggravated Sex-Assault Conviction Upheld For Ottawa Man Who Hid HIV-Positive Status

Aggravated Sex-Assault Conviction Upheld For Ottawa Man Who Hid HIV-Positive Status
In a ruling this week, Ontario's top court upheld the December 2012 jury conviction against Steven Boone, who argued the complainants would have had sex with him anyway.

Aggravated Sex-Assault Conviction Upheld For Ottawa Man Who Hid HIV-Positive Status

Heather Rankin Goes Solo — And Enlists Rapper For Remake Of Tears For Fears Hit

Heather Rankin Goes Solo — And Enlists Rapper For Remake Of Tears For Fears Hit
It's an unlikely match — she's a petite traditional singer from small-town Cape Breton with tidy hair, and he's a sneaker-clad emcee who dons backwards hats and spits rhymes about his gritty Halifax suburb.

Heather Rankin Goes Solo — And Enlists Rapper For Remake Of Tears For Fears Hit

Nature Of Policing Makes It Ripe For Unprofessional Behaviour: Canada's Top Mountie Says

Nature Of Policing Makes It Ripe For Unprofessional Behaviour: Canada's Top Mountie Says
RCMP Commissioner Bob Paulson told members of the Vancouver Board of Trade on Thursday that harassment and bullying in the workplace is unacceptable.

Nature Of Policing Makes It Ripe For Unprofessional Behaviour: Canada's Top Mountie Says

Newfoundlanders Say Next Supreme Court Justice Should Come From Their Province

Newfoundlanders Say Next Supreme Court Justice Should Come From Their Province
The Supreme Court of Canada will soon have a vacancy, and the president of the Law Society of Newfoundland and Labrador says it's time the new justice came from her province.

Newfoundlanders Say Next Supreme Court Justice Should Come From Their Province