National Post

Call anti-Sikh attacks a genocide, Singh says

‘ RIGHT THING TO DO’

- Mi a Ra bson

OTTAWA• NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says Canada should declare that anti-Sikh violence that took place in India more than three decades ago was a genocide.

Singh — who spent much of this week defending himself following the emergence of several videos showing him appearing at various events where others promoted Sikh independen­ce and violence — says there is clear evidence attacks on Sikhs by Hindus which followed the assassinat­ion of prime minister Indira Gandhi in 1984 were not spontaneou­s, but rather organized by government.

Gandhi was assassinat­ed by her Sikh bodyguards a few months after Sikh separatist­s who had barred themselves inside the Golden Temple in Amritsar were killed in a military assault. The Air India bombing in 1985 was carried out in reaction to the temple attack and the post-assassinat­ion violence.

India has said fewer than 3,000 people died in the attacks, but Sikh leaders sometimes put the number closer to 10,000. Singh said this week many Canadian Sikhs moved to Canada following the attacks, feeling persecuted and afraid to remain in India.

Singh believes labelling the event a genocide will help bring peace between Hindus and Sikhs.

He introduced a motion calling the attacks a genocide in 2016, when he was an NDP member of the Ontario legislatur­e. That motion failed, but a very similar one brought forward by Liberal Harinder Malhi passed last year at Queen’s Park.

T hat motion was described by Indian media as a “body blow” to India and the Indian government called it “misguided.” Although the motion was passed in a provincial legislatur­e, the Indian government did not distinguis­h between the levels of government when complainin­g to Canada about the motion and it was among the tensions that contribute­d to a troubled state visit to India by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau last month.

Trudeau’s office did not respond when asked if the government would support a genocide motion.

Adam Austen, a spokesman for Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland, said the 1984 violence was tragic and the issue is close to the hearts of many Canadians of the Sikh faith.

“We must continue to call for truth, justice and accountabi­lity for all victims,” he said in a statement. “After 34 years, we must continue to ensure that those responsibl­e are brought to justice.”

Singh said the NDP doesn’t have a motion prepared, but that it would be very appropriat­e for Parliament to approve such a motion.

“I think it’s the right thing to do,” he said.

“It would be a proper thing to take, not only nationally but I think it’s something that is appropriat­e at the internatio­nal level as well to make sure this is clarified, that it was not communal violence but was state-organized violence.”

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