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1984 anti-Sikh riots victims hope to get justice in 2021

Many of the victims are hopeful that promises made by the Central government will be fulfilled in 2021. …writes Mohammed Suaib Khan

The 1984 anti-Sikh riots was much politicised but even after the completion of 37 years of the incident, the victims are awaiting justice and compensation.

Many of the victims are hopeful that promises made by the Central government will be fulfilled in 2021.

The victims will once again meet National Commission for Minorities (NCM) Chairman Iqbal Singh Lalpura and submit files of 150 such affected who are yet to get a home.

Earlier, the victims had submitted a memorandum to the Commission which sought fulfilment of the promises made by the government.

Taking cognisance of the issue, the Commission had issued notices to seven states.

Sonu Singh, resident of Delhi’s Tilak Vihar and also a victim of the riots said: “At that time we used to reside in Trilok Puri and my father and grandfather were killed by the rioters. At that time I was five-years-old. I have two brothers and we have been given temporary allotment of the house. We still do not have owner’s right. We stayed in a camp for one year after 1984, post which we were moved to Tilak Vihar. The government took Rs 1,000 from us and alotted the house. We have been requesting the governments to give us owner’s right.”

Meanwhile, the Arvind Kejriwal government in Delhi had also promised jobs, free electricity and owner’s right of the houses but nothing was fulfilled.

Talking about the issue, NCM Chairman Lalpura said, “Our aim is to provide speedy justice to the victims. We have issued notices to seven states and will be successful in our endeavour.”

Besides, the Commission has sought information on delay in granting compensation to the victims, and cases submitted against accused and further proceedings.

Sonu said: “The Central and state governments had announced several packages for the victims but there are many people who have not got any compensation. “

Various schemes, including giving freehold of temporary allotments, were promised but not implemented, Sonu claimed.

He also demanded that Rs 2,500 pension given to the elderly should be revised.

Compensation announced by Minority Affairs Minister Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi in August this year should also be given, Sonu said.

Naqvi said: “The government has been blaming the victims. An SIT was formed post which the accused were brought to book. Even process for providing compensation also started.”

However, the Minister did not respond when asked as to how many victims have received compensation.

In August, the Minister had informed the Lok Sabha that the Central government has announced a relief and rehabilitation package, under which families of the deceased will be given Rs 3.5 lakhs, while the injured will get Rs 1.25 lakhs.

The scheme also has a provision of Rs 2,500 monthly pension to the wives and parents of the riot victims.

The expenditure on the pension amount has to be borne by the state governments, Naqvi said.

In 2014 too, the Central government had announced enhancement of the ex-gratia of the riots victim to Rs 5 lakhs.

The Union Ministry of Minority Affairs had said for increased relief amount to victims, a provision of Rs 4.5 crore was made in the 2021-22 Budget.

As many as 944 temporary allotments were made to some of the victims, while many are still waiting for it.

The Kejriwal government has been sending electricity bill of Rs 2.5 lakh, while the previous government have not even demanded the power charge, the victims said.

Fifty-year-old victim Balbir Singh said: “I was only 12 when my family was killed. I was thrashed due to which I fell unconscious. I suffered a head injury and my head was tonsured. Till date, I cannot wear a turban. Many of the injured got compensation. I got Rs 2,000 and later Rs 1.25 by the Manmohan Singh government.”

On October 31, 1984, the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was assassinated by her Sikh bodyguards, after which around 3,000 Sikhs were killed in Delhi. During the period, anti-Sikh riots erupted in various parts of the country.

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SIT probing 1984 Sikh riots gets 6-months’ extension

The investigation of the cases is almost over. After the paperwork, only the arrest of the accused is now pending….reports Asian Lite News

The Uttar Pradesh government has given a six months’ extension to the special investigation team (SIT) probing the anti-Sikh riots of 1984.

The SIT had sought extension and the state government has given time to the SIT to complete the investigation and make arrests by May 2022.

The investigation of the cases is almost over. After the paperwork, only the arrest of the accused is now pending.

In the anti-Sikh riots, 127 people were killed in Kanpur in the aftermath of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi’s assassination on October 31, 1984.

After the filing of the report, action could not be taken due to lack of evidence and witnesses.

The SIT has identified more than 80 accused. On verification, it was found that only 66 accused are alive.

SIT Superintendent of Police Balendu Bhushan Singh said, “The testimony of one or two is pending. Other operations have been completed. The accused will be arrested soon after completing the paperwork. We have identified a dozen rioters who were involved in several murders.”

The state government had set up the SIT on February 5, 2019, to inquire into the circumstances leading to the deadly riots. The team was set up after the apex court issued notice to the state government in August 2017 on a petition seeking SIT probe into the riots.

The four-member SIT is headed by retired Uttar Pradesh DGP Atul. The other members are retired district judge Subhash Chandra Agarwal and retired additional director (prosecution) Yogeshwar Krishna Srivastava. SP Balendu Bhushan Singh is its member secretary.

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‘San-84 Justice’: Back to dark age of riots

‘San-84 Justice’, he said, apart from being released theatrically on Tuesday, November 2, would also be streamed on an OTT platform…reports Asian Lite News.

The 78-minute-long Hindi-Punjabi film ‘San-84 Justice’ views the anti-Sikh riots that erupted after the assassination of the late former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi through the lens of a lower-middle-class family caught in the vortex of the violence.

Speaking about the film after a screening here on Monday, writer-director Sandeep Kumar Rana said that he had grown up in a neighbourhood where people lived through the trauma and had been personally impacted by it. The memories that refused to die inspired him to make the movie.

He said: “I grew up in an area that was represented by Sajjan Kumar, the former Congress MP who has been sentenced to a jail term for his role in the 1984 Sikh massacre. I remember a Sikh gentleman who lost his mind because of a lethal attack on him. For years, he would keep sitting for hours on the street with a board that read ‘Radio Singer – Yahan har tarah ke gaane gaaye jaate hain’. Our producers Mujeeb-ul Hassan and Jitesh Kumar were in London for the premiere of their film ‘Side A & Side B’ and they met some Sikhs who were victims of the 1984 massacres. Listening to them, they decided to make a film on this subject.”

The film revolves around the family of a rice merchant, Gurfateh Singh, played by the actor Vipin Sharma. He, his wife, three sons and brother, were leading a regular life till Operation Bluestar happened at the Golden Temple and then Mrs Gandhi was assassinated on October 31, 1984. The following day, the violence spiralled out of control.

These seismic events, and the ways they affected the lives of ordinary people, form the core of the storyline of the haunting film, which was shot on a shoestring budget just before the second wave of the pandemic. Talking about the dark film, the director said, “The screenplay makes the audience bond with members of the family of Gurfateh Singh. The audience wants them to live, but that does not happen. The film is about a real event and the real world.”

Rana’s earlier work as writer and director have included the satirical comedy ‘Camp Decent’ and ‘Auzaar’, which has travelled to a number of film festivals. ‘San-84 Justice’, he said, apart from being released theatrically on Tuesday, November 2, would also be streamed on an OTT platform. He added: “Our objective is to reach the maximum number of people, but not provoke any adverse sentiments in any particular community.”

The film, however, does bring to life a particularly painful moment that India would like to forget.

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