Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Court begins sedition trial in 1981 Palam hijacking case

- HT Correspond­ent

CHANDIGARH: Almost six years after the Delhi Police filed a supplement­ary charge-sheet of sedition against five men whom a Pakistani court had convicted of hijacking an Air India plane from Palam Airport in 1981, a court in Delhi started fresh trial in the case on Tuesday.

As the aircraft was taken to Pakistan, that country’s police had arrested the hijackers and a court had sentenced them to life term.

Additional chief metropolit­an magistrate Jyoti Kler granted two-day interim bail to alleged Sikh hijackers Satnam Singh and Tejinder Pal Singh. It also asked the investigat­ing officer to be present in the court on July 20.

The accused had moved the Delhi high court in December 2012 through a writ petition seeking the quashing of the supplement­ary charge-sheet, but the court had refused to stay the fresh trial.

Gajinder Singh, Karan Singh Jasbir Singh Cheema, Satnam Singh and Tajinder Pal Singh hijacked hijacked an Air India flight IC-423 from New Delhi to Srinagar in September 1981 and forced it to land in Pakistan. All five are connected to a radicals’ body Dal Khalsa and Gajinder Singh who remained its president for many years was made its patron last year.

They had demanded release of hardliner Jarnail Singh Bhindrawal­e, release of Sikh prisoners and compensati­on to Sikh demonstrat­ors killed in police firing on September 20, 1981, at Mehta Chowk.

Satnam Singh, belonged to Paonta Sahib, and after serving his sentence in Pakistan in 1995 went to the US where he sought asylum. He was, however, deported to India in 1999.

The fifth accused Tajinder Pal Singh had gone to Canada after serving his sentence in Pakistan. He was deported to India in 1998.

Gajinder Singh tried to move to Germany, but was refused entry in the country and deported back to Pakistan and is in exile.

Karan Singh from Srinagar and Jasbir Singh Cheema from Khanna are said to be in Switzerlan­d since 1995. Both have got asylum in Switzerlan­d. LAWYERS CLAIM DOUBLE JEOPARDY Lawyers who appeared on the behalf of the accused argued that the petitioner­s had spent 35 years of their life in litigation and had served one life sentence in Pakistan.

“The instance is an example of double jeopardy, their entire life will go facing trial after trial for one set of circumstan­ce, there should be end to their agony,” the defense lawyers told court.

Dal Khalsa spokespers­on Kanwar Pal Singh said, “This is travesty of justice. The Indian government has put the hijackers on trial, after 36 years of the incident, for sedition, ignoring their life imprisonme­nt in Pakistan for the same offence.” NEWDELHI: A Delhi court on Tuesday said it would hear on July 21 a 1984 anti-Sikh riots case in which the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) has sought permission to conduct polygraph test on Congress leader Jagdish Tytler, who had been given clean chit thrice.

The court has sought the CBI investigat­ing officer’s response on the plea of controvers­ial arms dealer and witness Abhishek Verma, who has given conditiona­l consent to undergo the liedetecti­on test, to provide him round-the-clock security till the time he undergoes the test.

Additional chief metropolit­an magistrate Shivali Sharma had earlier asked Verma to file a written applicatio­n in this regard and sought the investigat­ing officer’s response.

Verma had been seeking 24-hour security for him and his family citing serious threats to their lives.

He, however, had agreed to the suggestion given by the counsel for the victims in the court that he be given round-the-clock security till he undergoes polygraph test after which the threat perception be re-assessed.

Besides Verma, the CBI has also sought Tytler’s consent to undergo lie-detection test, which he has refused.

The court had on May 9 directed Tytler and Verma to give an “unambiguou­s” reply on whether they wanted to undergo the lie-detection test. It had held that the CBI’s plea for obtaining their consent for the test was maintainab­le.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? Hijackers Tejinder Pal Singh (right) and Satnam Singh (third from right) outside a Delhi court on Tuesday.
HT PHOTO Hijackers Tejinder Pal Singh (right) and Satnam Singh (third from right) outside a Delhi court on Tuesday.

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