Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

SIKH MILITANCY REARS ITS HEAD

FRESH CHALLENGE Many youngsters in the state are being influenced by Khalistani groups active abroad and recruited to kill specific targets, including RSS members and Dera followers

- Ravinder Vasudeva ravinder.vasudeva@hindustant­imes.com n

Many youngsters in Punjab are being influenced via social media by Khalistani groups active abroad and recruited to kill specific targets , including RSS members and Dera followers. ››

CHANDIGARH: A new brand of Sikh militancy has surfaced in Punjab—educated, suave, cleans haven and mostly millennial young men and women from families with no links to the pro-Khalistan movement, according to police.

Radicalise­d through social media by Khalistani groups active abroad, these young Sikhs are recruited to kill specific targets set by their handlers, said police after busting several modules behind “targeted killings” in Punjab last year.

“It’ s a new way of spreading terrorism. Pro-Khalistani forces are radicalisi­ng people using cyberspace… That’ s why we handed the probe into all such cases to the National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA),” state director general of police Suresh Ar ora said .“You never know how many such modules they have prepared for anti-national activities.”

The alarm rang after police arrested five men who are said to be part of a module that had shot dead Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh(RSS) members in Ludhiana, Der a Sacha Sauda followers and a Christian pastor between October 31 and November 7, 2017.

These new-age militants have not race of any Khalistani activity in at least three generation­s of their families. None of them is from households that suffered the worst during the 1984 anti-Sikh riots. They also have no links to “victims” of Punjab’s violent insurgency in the 1980s and early 1990s.

These militants weren’t even born when the rio ts happened after the assassinat­ion of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi by her Sikh bodyguards on October 31, 1984. About 3,000 people were killed in the violence, mostly in New Delhi.

In one module busted this August, police found an 18-year-old Ludhiana girl allegedly brainwashe­d through Facebook by fundamenta­lists in Canada and incited to kill Hindu leaders.

Of the 45 suspects arrested so far from different modules, at least 20 are below 35. They are tech and social media savvy. The men have short hair and are clean shaven, though keeping a beard and growing long hair are among the basic tenets of Sikhism.

Heavy police crackdown in the 1990s may have wiped out an armed campaign in Punjab by several Sikh groups for an independen­t country, K hali stan. But the Khalistani ideology has continued to fest er among several fundamenta­list Sikhs settled abroad.

These people have limited appeal and support in Punjab, but intelligen­ce agencies periodical­ly warn of attempts to revive militancy in the state.

Among the five suspects arrested on November 4, 2017, was Jagtar Singh aka J aggi Jo hal, from the United Kingdom. He told police the K hali stan Liberation Force (KLF), amilitant group with Harminder Singh Mintoo and Harmeet Singh ‘PhD’ as its top leaders, is doing the bidding of Pakistani spy agency Inter-Services Intelligen­ce (ISI) to recruit young Sikhs for anti-India activities. Police said the “targeted killing” approach was conceived in 2014 by the ISI. The four other arrested men—Jam mu resident Jimmy Singh, Ramandeep, Hardeep Shera and Dharmendra Gugni—corroborat­ed Jagtar’s statement.

The 50- year-old Min too was arrested in November 2014 at the New Delhi airport after he was deported from Thailand. But H ar meet with the help of Bab bar K ha ls a Internatio­nal member Gursharan Bir Singh, who is also from the UK, continued recruiting youngsters to murder select targets .“PhD introduced me to Gursh ar an who ran a website called never forget 1984. com. I translated Punjabi material about K hali stan into English for the website. At his behest, I was given the responsibi­lity of contacting young people for the cause,” Jagtar said in a statement to the police.

According to the police, Jagtar is from a family of restaurate­urs and was in India for his wedding when he was arrested in Jalandhar on November 4. He and his gang were busted after police caught Laddi, a cousin of Jimmy, for arms trading. The cousin named Jimmy and the police then traced all others in the network, one by one, according to a police officer.

Jimmy met J ag tar in Glasgow, where the Jam mu resident was working as a restaurant chef after his student visa expired. They became friends and J ag tar pressed him in 2015 to buy weapons from Jammu for “one of his friends in India who is a competitiv­e shooter ”, police said.

Jimmy contacted Laddi, who apparently knew arms smugglers. Jagtar transferre­d £4,000 through Western Union to Laddi, a few days before he was arrested with a pistol procured illegally.

Punjab Police then issued a “red corner notice” against Jimmy who was caught when he returned to India. Jimmy’s associatio­n with the module is through J ag tar while two other members — Shera and Ramandeep — were influenced directly by Gursharan. A police officer said Shera, a resident of Majri Kishnewali in Fatehgarh Sahib district, met KL F chief Min too during a holiday in Italy in 2013.

“Sh era knew nothing about K hali stan before that… After Min to o’ s arrest, Gursharan interacted with Shera via Skype and trained him too.” Shera is an ambidextro­us sharpshoot­er who killed “targets” assigned to him by the KLF chief and would flee to Italy after every hit, according to the police.

When he was arrested at a gym in Sirhind, his family wasn’ t aware he was back in India. Police said his accomplice was Ram an deep, a Mo ga resident, who would drive a motorcycle, and She ra, riding pillion, would shoot pistols with both hands.

Ram an deep, known among his friends as Canadian, was allegedly motivated by a KLF faction active in Canada. Gursharan brought the duo together in December 2015.

According to investigat­ors, the initial targets for these shooters were RS S members in Ludhiana, including retired Brigadier J ag dish Gagneja, the organ is at io n’ s Punjab unit vice president.

“Gagneja’s killing was meticulous­ly planned. Shera and Ramandeep visited the RSS leader’s house 13 times,” a DG Prank officer said.

Another target was the Dera Sacha Sauda, whose controvers­ial chief Gurmeet Ram Ra him Singh triggered outrage in 2007 when he appeared before a congregati­on at tired as the 10 th Sikh guru, Guru Gobind Singh.

The militants killed a father and his son, both Dera followers, in Khanna.

Pastor Sultan Masih in Salem Tab ri of Ludhiana was shot dead following the handlers’ weird, hate-filled message to kill “a man in white clothes with a cross around his neck”.

CRACKDOWN IN THE 1990S MAY HAVE WIPED OUT AN ARMED CAMPAIGN IN PUNJAB FOR AN INDEPENDEN­T COUNTRY BUT A COMPLEX KHALISTANI IDEOLOGY CONTINUED TO FESTER AMONG FUNDAMENTA­LIST SIKHS SETTLED ABROAD

 ?? HT FILE ?? Police officers show the weapons recovered from the accused in targeted killing cases at a press conference in Ludhiana on November 2, 2017.
HT FILE Police officers show the weapons recovered from the accused in targeted killing cases at a press conference in Ludhiana on November 2, 2017.

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