Indian Police Mass
Arrest Sikh Media, Clergy,
Politicians After
Global Sikh Convocation
Amritsar,
Punjab: Nov. 12, 2015 — The preventative detention on Nov. 11 of several key
Sikh leaders and a journalist by Indian police at the conclusion of a global
convocation of Sikhs called “Sarbat Khalsa” is a cause for concern among some
who see it as an indication of government interference in their religious
affairs that they fear may result in the torture of those arrested.
“As an
American citizen traveling to Punjab in the 1990s, I was arrested, jailed, and
tortured for three months by Indian police,” remarks Balbir Singh Dhillon,
president of California's influential West Sacramento Gurdwara. “Held without
charges, it took 50 representatives from U.S. Congress speaking out to get my
release. My prayers are with our recently arrested Sikh leaders, especially
after my firsthand experience with the horrors of Indian police
custody.”
Those arrested in Amritsar and surrounding areas of Punjab include
Simranjit Singh Mann (president of political party Shiromani Akali Dal -
Amritsar), Mokham Singh (president of political party United Akali Dal), Dhian
Singh Mand (newly elected proxy priest of Akal Takht, the Sikh religion’s
governing institution), and Surinder Singh (a journalist with Talking Punjab
who was providing in-depth, on-location coverage of the Sarbat Khalsa). The Sarbat
Khalsa, held on Nov. 10, was called in response to repeated desecration of
Guru Granth Sahib, the Sikh scripture, and the resulting massacre by police of
peaceful Sikh protesters.
Many other prominent Sikhs involved in
organizing the event were also rounded up. None are charged with any crime,
as Amritsar Police Commissioner Jatinder
Aulakh says they are “under preventive detention.” Dhillon speculates
police may have invoked Criminal Procedure Code sections 107/151, which allow
police to arrest people they think are “likely to commit a breach of the
peace.”
After the law was used in February to detain U.S. citizen Ravinderjit
Singh Gogi and his hunger-striking father, Surat Singh Khalsa, six U.S. congressional representatives
protested in a letter to Secretary of State John Kerry: “The existence and
use of these laws, which India has used to restrict freedom of expression and
association, is contrary to democratic principles, and specifically to the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights which India has
ratified.”
The Sarbat Khalsa, according to some reports, drew upwards of
750,000 Sikhs. “It was a million-Sikh march,” states Bhajan Singh of Sikh
Information Centre. He says, however, that India-based associates of Bhim Rao
Ambedkar Sikh Foundation, an international nonprofit of which he is a board
member, were prevented from attending the convention, explaining:
“Over 50
BRASF activists were left stranded on their way to the Sarbat Khalsa when the
bus company they'd arranged refused service because police had threatened to
revoke their commercial licenses if they transported anyone to the convention.
It is incredible that perhaps a quarter of a million Sikhs from every part of
the earth gathered peacefully despite persistent government harassment. We
estimate that perhaps 250,000 more were prevented from attending, not to
mention the millions who watched online.”
Announced in September, the
emergency convention had two primary goals, according to Manjit Singh Uppal, who traveled to the
event from California as a representative of historic Stockton Gurdwara, the
oldest Sikh-American institution. “We need to build a system for our
representation so that we can hold another Sarbat Khalsa in six months. Also,
we need to decide how we can represent the Sikhs all over the world that live
outside of India.”
Thirteen resolutions passed by the
assembly focus on revitalizing the Sikh religion’s leadership by
removing four of five Jathedars (priests) of its Takhts (sacred seats of
authority), replacing them with symbolic interim appointees, and calling for a
more intensive Sarbat Khalsa on Vaisakhi 2016, a festival in April.
The next
Sarbat Khalsa is expected to dwell extensively on the declaration of Resolution
11 that the Sikh community “aspires for Vatican-like status for Harimandir
Sahib Complex to ensure every Sikh’s birthright to visit and deliberate at the
Akal Takhat Sahib.”
Human rights was a harmonious theme in other resolutions,
which denounce police and army officials involved in the Sikh Genocide and
declare the Sikh Nation “demands all political prisoners of any movement in
India such as Sikhs, Naxalites, Nagas, and others, be released
unconditionally.” Invoking the religion’s egalitarian foundations, another
resolution “appeals to stop the construction of caste-based gurdwaras and
cremation grounds.”
Gogi, the son of 83-year-old hunger-striker Bapu Surat
Singh Khalsa, who completed his 300th day without food on Nov. 11 despite
repeated arrest and force-feeding by police, spoke about his father’s struggle
from the convention stage. An American citizen, he was released from an Indian
jail in April after repeated letters from Congress pled for him. Detained for
two months without arraignment, he also reports being tortured.
“The recent
wave of ideological and political pushback by people like Mayawati in Uttar
Pradesh shows how India’s downtrodden masses are using every faculty to
struggle against a deeply oppressive environment,” suggests Bhajan. “India’s
minorities are exhausted by de facto dictatorships, and genocides, and torture,
and they are rejecting the Bharatiya Janata Party’s politics of hate.”
India’s
ruling party, the BJP, also shares power in Punjab’s state government. After
orchestrating a genocide of Sikhs in 1984, India’s other leading party, the
Indian National Congress, finds less popularity in the community, although the
BJP is similarly accused of genocidal attacks on Muslim and Christians.
The
Indian government, under every party, has long faced unresolved charges by
international human rights bodies of torture, extrajudicial killings, creation
of mass graves, persecution of religious minorities, and other atrocities.
Tales of genocide survivors are common among the Sikh diaspora, which includes
thousands who claim refugee status. And now the arrest of so many influential
Sikhs at the conclusion of the convention is incensing Sikhs outside India.
“I’m
really sorry to see a journalist also arrested for reporting on our Sarbat
Khalsa,” says Dhillon. “The Indian government is so desperate to keep control
over the management of the Sikh religion. The government in Punjab is
politicizing our faith. So they arrested all the top Sikh leaders for nothing
but to interfere in the operations of our religious institutions. There’s no
religious freedom in India, none at all, not like the United States.”
According to Jago Punjabi, the arrests were
planned at a Nov. 10 meeting hosted by Punjab’s Chief Minister, Parkash Badal,
with key cabinet ministers and the president of Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak
Committee (the managerial body for the Sikhs set up by the British Empire under
its colonial “Gurdwara Act of 1925”), all of whom consulted with Punjab’s
Advocate-General, Ashok Aggarwal, and senior police officers about the legality
of preventatively detaining Mann and other Sikh leaders.
“The world should not
stand by silently as peaceful Sikhs are being arrested, tortured, and killed in
Punjab for protesting government interference in their religion,” concludes
Bhajan.
He adds, “Congress, especially, has a duty to keep a protective eye
out for the many Sikh-Americans who are returning from the Sarbat Khalsa. And
as a patron of the American Sikh Congressional Caucus, I call on those
representatives to talk about issues like this which so deeply concern the
global Sikh community. Religious freedom in India is on the brink of a cliff
not just for Sikhs, but for all the country’s religious minorities, who are at
risk of a terrifying amount of violence from the State and its associates.”
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