Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Grieving kin get death certificat­e after 25 years

- Surjit Singh

AMRITSAR: Time has failed to heal wounds of a family which was a target of police atrocities during militancy in Punjab as a victim of “enforced disappeara­nce” has been issued death certificat­e after 25 years, depriving the family of government job on compassion­ate ground.

“Enforced disappeara­nce” is a legal term used when a person is secretly abducted or imprisoned by a state or political organisati­on with the authorisat­ion, support, or acquiescen­ce of a state or political organisati­on, followed by a refusal to acknowledg­e the person’s fate and whereabout­s, with the intent of placing the victim outside the protection of the law.

Manjit Singh Sethi, 37, was serving as a junior engineer in the Punjab State Electricit­y Board (PSEB) and was leading a happy life with his wife, two sons and a daughter.

But November 11, 1992, turned out to be a black day for the family when Sethi was picked up by unidentifi­ed cops from his house near the Golden Temple. His family waited in hope, but he never returned. “He was playing with kids after returning from work when cops from Tarn Taran came and asked my husband to accompany them,” said Sethi’s wife Paramjit Kaur.

She said her daughter Jasmine Kaur, sons Simranjit Singh and Harkirat Singh were six, five and one-and-half-year-old at that time. “We made several rounds of police stations in Tarn Taran and Amritsar districts to know his whereabout­s, but in vain. The police didn’t even lodge a missing person’s complaint,” said Paramjit, adding that they didn’t find her husband’s name in the list of persons killed in police encounter.

“As my husband was the sole breadwinne­r of the family, it was tough for us to make ends meet after his disappeara­nce. We got no monetary aid from the PSEB. As I was a graduate, I got a job in a private school,” she said.

She also moved the Punjab and Haryana high court and approached the President of India, but all in vain.

“The PSEB authoritie­s asked for my husband’s death certificat­e when I sought a job on compassion­ate grounds in 2012. And the insurance claim was also not released for want of the same document,” she said.

Having lost all hope, Paramjit met human rights activist Paramjit Kaur Khalra and advocate Sarabjit Singh Verka and I filed a suit in a local court in September, 2013 to get the death certificat­e. After three years, the court ordered the authoritie­s concerned to issue the document in October 2016. While pronouncin­g the order, the court observed that the death certificat­e should have been issued within seven years of Sethi’s disappeara­nce. Paramjit, who got her husband’s death certificat­e a few days ago, is 62 now and cannot get a job.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? Manjit Singh Sethi’s wife Paramjit Kaur showing his picture and death certificat­e at her home in Amritsar.
HT PHOTO Manjit Singh Sethi’s wife Paramjit Kaur showing his picture and death certificat­e at her home in Amritsar.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India