The Province

Parole board ends counsellin­g for Reyat

- KIM BOLAN kbolan@postmedia.com vancouvers­un.com/tag/real-scoop Twitter.com/kbolan

The only man convicted in the 1985 Air India bombing can skip future counsellin­g sessions even though a psychologi­st says he has “made minimal gains in therapy,” the Parole Board of Canada has ruled.

Inderjit Singh Reyat has been convicted twice of manslaught­er in the deaths of 331 people, as well as for perjury after he lied at the terrorism trial of his two co-accused, who were later acquitted.

When Reyat was released from prison in 2016 after serving twothirds of his third sentence in the perjury case, he was put on special conditions, including that he attend counsellin­g “to address contributi­ng factors to your offending.”

But that condition was removed by parole board member Catherine Dawson on April 29 because Reyat was no longer benefiting from the counsellin­g.

The psychologi­st who worked with Reyat said in a report that he had “made minimal gains in therapy.”

“You have presented as guarded, denied your involvemen­t in the Air India tragedy, and have denied that you are a person of strong political beliefs,” Dawson said in her decision, released Monday.

Reyat told his counsellor that all he had done is supply bomb parts to the terrorists, which he saw as “an act of kindness.”

“You have explained that any ‘missteps’ were a result of bad judgment in your desire to be helpful. Nonetheles­s the psychologi­st indicates that you appeared to partly address a cognitive distortion that in your desire to ‘help’ you may have turned a blind eye contributi­ng to violence on a mass scale,” Dawson wrote. “The board remains very concerned with the gravity of your criminal offending that contribute­d to the deaths of 331 people. The impact of these deaths on families as well across the community and around the globe is incalculab­le.”

Dawson also said that Reyat’s remorse was more about the impact of his crimes on his family, not on the victims.

“The Board has noted you have not gained measurable insight into the harm you caused others but only the consequenc­es that you and your family experience­d. You have not developed empathy for others through the process; the gains you have made in psychologi­cal counsellin­g are limited.”

Reyat was convicted in 1991 of manslaught­er for building a bomb that exploded on June 23, 1985 at Tokyo’s Narita Airport, resulting in the deaths of two baggage handlers. He got a 10-year sentence.

In February 2003, he pleaded guilty to manslaught­er in the same day bombing of Air India flight 182, which exploded en route to India from Canada. All 329 people aboard perished.

In 2011, he was sentenced to seven and a half years for lying at the trial of Ripudaman Singh Malik and Ajaib Singh Bagri. Both were found not guilty in March 2005.

The two bombings were plotted by B.C. Sikh separatist­s who targeted India’s national airline to retaliate for the Indian Army’s raid a year earlier on the Golden Temple — Sikhism’s holiest shrine — in Amritsar.

 ?? BILL KEAY/PNG FILES ?? Inderjit Singh Reyat, who has served terms for manslaught­er and perjury for building bombs used against Air India flights, has shown little empathy for the families of 331 people who died, says the Parole Board of Canada.
BILL KEAY/PNG FILES Inderjit Singh Reyat, who has served terms for manslaught­er and perjury for building bombs used against Air India flights, has shown little empathy for the families of 331 people who died, says the Parole Board of Canada.

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