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AIR INDIA - SINGH MALIK - NOT GUILTY
http://www.cknw.com ^ | Me

Posted on 03/16/2005 11:03:15 AM PST by SweetPilotofCanuckistan

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To: SweetPilotofCanuckistan
Here's CBC on the article if you really want to get angry. CBC News
21 posted on 03/16/2005 7:31:10 PM PST by Eva
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To: Eva

Seems like the prosecution's witness turned sour.


22 posted on 03/16/2005 8:24:09 PM PST by econ_grad
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To: econ_grad
Is the evidence that incontrovertible? Did the leader of this group go on TV to claim responsibility for the attack? Why didn't someone who had the clear evidence you are looking at during the trial? I wouldn't be surprised if this thing was orchestrated by the Indian US and Israeli govts to discredit the Khalistan movement Islamics. You should learn how to take a defeat.

Now do you see how stupid that assumption is? This is not like the burning of the Reichstag -- which govt would show itself to be impotent and murder so many of its own citizens to "discredit" known terrorist organisations. Don't make silly assumptions
23 posted on 03/16/2005 10:48:29 PM PST by Cronos (Never forget 9/11)
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To: Cronos

Yes and someone dressed up like Osama to take up credit for it. In fact, Osama doesn't even exist. Chances are he is a cross between Dick Cheney and Halliburton.

And you think I am being silly. Which govt kills its own citizens to discredit terrorist organizations? The govt that entered the Golden Temple to massacre fellow Indians. You are passing around conspiracy theories that are so stupid that only people in the Indian parliament will believe you.

Look, these people are innocent. You are better off trying to find the real killers than hang a couple of innocent ones.


24 posted on 03/16/2005 11:16:53 PM PST by econ_grad
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To: econ_grad
I am glad that the trial was not held in India.

It's likely that they wouldn't have gotten a trial in India; they would have been made to disappear, been tortured, and then declared "unidentified" and secretly cremated like 50,000 other Sikhs have been in "the world's largest democracy." This policy was revealed in a1995 report by a human-rights activist named Jaswant Singh Khalra.

After the report came out, Mr. Khalra was out washing his car one day when he was picked up by the police. About six weeks later, still in police custody, Mr. Khalra was "mysteriously" killed.

The only witness to the Khalra kidnapping, Rajiv Singh Randhawa, has been repeatedly arrested by the police essentially for nothing -- including once being arrested outside the Golden Temple in Amritsar for trying to hand a petition to the visiting British Home Minister.

Indian democracy in action.

25 posted on 03/17/2005 6:59:21 AM PST by TBP
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To: samsonite

"Press Trust of Inida" is wholly controlled by the Indian government.


26 posted on 03/17/2005 7:01:02 AM PST by TBP
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To: Cronos

http://www.khalistan.com/PressReleases/PR031605_MalikBagriAcquitted.htm

Malik, Bagri Acquitted of All Charges in Air India Case
Justice Has Been Done Despite Pressure From Indian Regime

WASHINGTON, D.C., March 16, 2005 - Ripudaman Singh Malik and Ajaib Singh Bagri have been acquitted of all charges in the Air India bombing case, in a major rebuke to the Indian regime. Malik and Bagri were found not guilty today in the deaths of 329 people who perished when Air India Flight 182 was brought down by a bomb on June 23, 1985 in Canada’s worst case of mass murder. Justice Ian Josephson delivered the verdicts this afternoon, saying he didn't believe many of the witnesses.

“Justice has been done for these Sikhs,” said Dr. Gurmit Singh Aulakh, President of the Council of Khalistan, which leads the Sikh struggle for independence. “Despite the effort of the Indian government to blame these Sikhs for its own acts, they have been found innocent. This is a major setback for the Hindustani regime,” he said. A Canadian Member of Parliament wrote in 1989 that the Canadian government had spent $60 million on the case. “On behalf of over 600,000 Sikhs in Canada and the 25 million Sikhs worldwide, we would like to express our gratitude to Judge Josephson for doing the right thing and not caving in to the pressure of the Indian government,” Dr. Aulakh said.

Air India flight 182 was blown up off Ireland in 1985. It was on its way from Toronto to Bombay. It was supposed to be blown up at the London airport when no passengers would be aboard, but due to delays it blew up over Ireland. The book Soft Target by Canadian journalists Zuhair Kashmeri of the Toronto Globe and Mail and Brian McAndrew of the Toronto Star exposed India’s responsibility for this bombing. In the book, Kashmeri and McAndrew quoted a Canadian Security Investigative Service (CSIS) investigator as saying, “If you really want to clear the incidents quickly, take vans down to the Indian High Commission and the consulates in Toronto and Vancouver, load up everybody and take them down for questioning. We know it and they know it that they are involved.”

The book shows that within hours after the flight was blown up, the Indian Consul General in Toronto, Surinder Malik (no relation to Ripudaman Singh Malik), called in a detailed description of the bombing and the names of those he said were involved, information that the Canadian government didn’t discover until weeks later. Mr. Malik said to look on the passenger manifest for the name “L. Singh.” This would turn out to be Lal Singh, who told the press that he was offered “two million dollars and settlement in a nice country” by the Indian regime to give false testimony in the case.

In his book Betrayal: The Spy Canada Abandoned, Member of Parliament David Kilgour wrote that Canadian-Polish double agent Ryszard Paszkowski was approached to join a plot to carry out a second bombing. The people who approached Paszkowski were connected to the Indian government.

The main backer of the group that was supposedly behind the Air India bombing had received a $2 million loan from the State Bank of India just before the plane was attacked, according to Soft Target. The year after the bombing, three Indian consuls general were asked to leave the country. At the time of the bombing, the Congress Party needed the Sikhs as scapegoats to win votes on a law-and-order platform. The attack also served as justification for the government to shed more Sikh blood.

The Indian government has murdered over 250,000 Sikhs since 1984, more than 300,000 Christians since 1948, over 90,000 Muslims in Kashmir since 1988, and tens of thousands of Tamils, Assamese, Manipuris, Dalits, Bodos, and others. The Indian Supreme Court called the Indian government's murders of Sikhs "worse than a genocide." According to a report by the Movement Against State Repression (MASR), 52,268 Sikhs and tens of thousands of other minorities are being held as political prisoners in India without charge or trial. Some have been in illegal custody since 1984! We demand the immediate release of all these political prisoners.

The Sikh Nation declared its independence from India on October 7, 1987 and formed the Council of Khalistan at that time to lead the struggle for independence. When India became independent, Sikhs were equal partners in the transfer of power and were to receive their own state, but the weak and ignorant Sikh leaders of the time were tricked into staying with India on the promise that they would have “the glow of freedom” and no law affecting the Sikhs would pass without their consent. Sikhs ruled an independent and sovereign Punjab from 1710 to 1716 and again from 1765 to 1849 and were recognized by most of the countries of the world at that time. Sikhs do not accept the Indian constitution. No Sikh representative has ever signed it.

V.P. Singh, who was the Indian Consul General in Toronto when Soft Target came out, was quoted in the June 22, 1989 issue of the Washington Times, as saying that Sikhs who support Khalistan are terrorists. The Council of Khalistan, which leads the Sikh struggle to liberate Khalistan, openly repudiated militancy and has an 18-year record of working to free Khalistan by peaceful, democratic, nonviolent means.

Indian police arrested human-rights activist Jaswant Singh Khalra after he exposed their policy of mass cremation of Sikhs, in which over 50,000 Sikhs have been arrested, tortured, and murdered, then their bodies were declared unidentified and secretly cremated. Khalra was murdered in police custody. His body was not given to his family. No one has been brought to justice for the kidnapping and murder of Jaswant Singh Khalra. The police never released the body of former Jathedar of the Akal Takht Gurdev Singh Kaunke after SSP Swaran Singh Ghotna murdered him. He has never been tried for the Jathedar Kaunke murder. In 1994, the U.S. State Department reported that the Indian government had paid over 41,000 cash bounties for killing Sikhs.

Missionary Graham Staines was murdered along with his two sons, ages 8 and 10, by a mob of militant, fundamentalist Hindu nationalists who set fire to the jeep, surrounded it, and chanted “Victory to Hannuman,” a Hindu god. None of the people involved has been tried. The persons who have murdered priests, raped nuns, and burned Christian churches have not been charged or tried. The murderers of 2,000 to 5,000 Muslims in Gujarat have never been brought to trial. An Indian newspaper reported that the police were ordered not to get involved in that massacre, a frightening parallel to the Delhi massacre of Sikhs in 1984.

India is not one country; it is a polyglot thrown together for the convenience of the British colonialists. It is doomed to break up as they did. Last year, the Punjab Legislative Assembly passed a bill cancelling the government’s daylight robbery of Punjab river water. The Assembly explicitly stated the sovereignty of Punjab.

“The Indian regime stands exposed for the bloody tyranny that it is,” said Dr. Aulakh. “This verdict is a major setback to their repressive drive for hegemony over all of South Asia,” he said. “This is a victory not only for the Sikh Nation, but for freedom-loving people everywhere.”

“I urge the international community to help us free Khalistan from Indian occupation,” Dr. Aulakh said. “Freedom is the birthright of all people and nations,” he said. “As Professor Darshan Singh, a former Jathedar of the Akal Takht, said, “If a Sikh is not for Khalistan, he is not a Sikh”,” Dr. Aulakh noted. “We must continue to press for freedom,” he said. “Without political power, religions cannot flourish and nations perish. A sovereign Khalistan is essential for the survival of the Sikh religion and the Sikh Nation.”


27 posted on 03/17/2005 7:05:17 AM PST by TBP
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To: econ_grad
I wouldn't be surprised if this thing was orchestrated by the Indian govt to discredit the Khalistan movement.

That is the most likely explanation. See my immediate prior post on this.

Also in the book Soft Target there is a scene where Indian government officials are talkign to Inderjit Singh Reyat, the third paerson accused in this plot. They are telling him what to say in court. It matches almost exactly the tale he wound up telling.

28 posted on 03/17/2005 7:08:12 AM PST by TBP
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To: econ_grad
You should learn how to take a defeat.

There are far too many who seem to have issues with disappointment.

29 posted on 03/17/2005 7:10:51 AM PST by Kretek
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To: TBP

u are brainwashed big time and r ready to believe anything that is anti-india.


30 posted on 03/17/2005 8:19:34 AM PST by thrust
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To: TBP

Top Ten Reasons Why Khalistan will be a Banana Replublic




10) After diversion of all major rivers from Khalistan to the Rajasthan
Thar desert for agriculture, the name desert will be dropped from
Thar and new maps will show something different - The Khalistan
desert.
9) Of Khalistani ex-Indian army personnel, more major generals,
lieutenants and commanders will be present in the Khalistani army
than foot soldiers.
8) Experience in the aerospace industry necessary for goods transport
in landlocked Khalistan would be limited to knowledge of "where
to plant the bomb".
7) A new wave of Khalistanis will hit the shores of western nations
in search of ref status under the guise of..what else..'Oppression'.
6) With their professed high regard for human rights, Khalistanis
with AK-47s would be permitted by constitution to run into shrines
and terrorize the population anytime their demands were not met.
5) Any arrest of militants would be deemed genocide regardless of
circumstance.
4) With no agriculture left after river diversions, the envisioned
export oriented growth plan will be reduced to the export of
terrorist.
3) Resulting trade sanctions imposed by India (as with US-Iran), will
result in Khalistanis burning books like 'Soft Target' in bulk as
a fuel source.
2) Dumb Jats would be blamed for screw-ups and marked for death in
place of the OC.
1) soc.culture.khalistan would be much like #khalistan on IRC
(i.e dead)


31 posted on 03/17/2005 8:27:18 AM PST by ekidsohbelaas (The Gods are REMFs)
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To: econ_grad

what happened in 1984 and in 2002 was horrible no doubt abt tht.
But u need to take into consideration how diverse the country is and how many religions r flourishing in it.
Also india is a young country compared to others.

My point is that these things happen sometimes and what u can best do is prevent it from happening again.

I am an Indian and am proud of the democratic setup of my country(the only one in the region).


32 posted on 03/17/2005 8:29:57 AM PST by thrust
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To: ekidsohbelaas

there wont be any khalistan.
Sikhs are the most nationalistic,patriotic people and the sacrifices they have made for india in wars is unmatched.


33 posted on 03/17/2005 8:35:00 AM PST by thrust
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To: thrust

I agree. And I agree because I know.

Chakkde!


34 posted on 03/17/2005 8:38:04 AM PST by ekidsohbelaas (The Gods are REMFs)
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To: thrust

I put out information, facts, details, and this is what I get for aresponse! It works time after time. And these people never have anything to backup their claims but the solemn word of the Indian regime.


35 posted on 03/17/2005 8:48:01 AM PST by TBP
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To: econ_grad
Yes and someone dressed up like Osama to take up credit for it. In fact, Osama doesn't even exist. Chances are he is a cross between Dick Cheney and Halliburton.

you ARE kidding, aren't you?

And you think I am being silly. Which govt kills its own citizens to discredit terrorist organizations? The govt that entered the Golden Temple to massacre fellow Indians.

The Indian govt took action against terrorists -- not against law-abiding citizens. If a group of citizens take up arms against the government, the country ahs a right to stop this
36 posted on 03/17/2005 8:48:58 AM PST by Cronos (Never forget 9/11)
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To: TBP

referring to Khalistan.com is the same are referring to the Aryan Nation website or the AlQ website.


37 posted on 03/17/2005 8:50:07 AM PST by Cronos (Never forget 9/11)
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To: TBP
That is the most likely explanation. See my immediate prior post on this./i>

Yeah right, and do you also believe that Bush orchestracted the 9/11 attacks?

38 posted on 03/17/2005 8:50:48 AM PST by Cronos (Never forget 9/11)
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To: TBP

Man ya sound bitter. So how much do you pay for therapy?

mwuhahahahahaa.... :D


39 posted on 03/17/2005 8:50:53 AM PST by ekidsohbelaas (Wahe Guru da Khalsa, Wahe Guru di Fateh)
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To: Cronos

Now that's just plain silly and it shows your prejudices big time. Can you show me ANY similarities between the Khalistan movement and groups like Aryan Nations?

And from the tone of your posts, I'mm surprised Aryan Nations bothers you anyway. Who do you think your Hindustani masters are?


40 posted on 03/17/2005 9:02:26 AM PST by TBP
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