Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Mithu wants Trudeau to help extradite his wife Jassi’s ‘killer’ mother, uncle

CASE SO FAR

- Ravinder Vasudeva

CHANDIGARH : Sukhwinder Singh Mithu, whose Canadian wife Jaswinder Kaur Jassi was allegedly killed at the behest of her mother and maternal uncle 18 years ago, wants the visiting Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to “personally intervene” for extraditin­g the duo to India to face trial.

Eight other accused in the case have already been awarded life imprisonme­nt but trial against Malkiat Kaur and her brother Surjit Singh Badesha, both Canadian citizens, could not be conducted in their absence.

All efforts for their extraditio­n have proved futile so far.

“I hope PM Trudeau who is known for his liberal values and fondness for human rights helps me get justice,” said Mithu, a resident of Kaunke village near Jagraon in Ludhiana. “He should help in extraditin­g the two culprits to India to face law of the land. They have killed my love and I have been fighting for justice for 18 years. Why is Canada protecting the killers?” DECEMBER 1994: Canadian citizen Jaswinder Kaur Jassi meets Sukhwinder Singh Mithu on her visit to Jagraon

MARCH 1999: The two get married in Amritsar

FEBRUARY 2000: Mithu booked for kidnapping, forcibly marrying Jassi

MAY 2000: Jassi lands in India, gives statement in Mithu’s favour

JUNE 2000: Contract killers attack the couple, leaving Jassi dead

Mithu from a poor Jat Sikh family fell in love with Jassi, daughter of multi-millionair­e orchard owners in British Columbia, during her visit to India in 1994. In 1999, she returned to India and secretly married Mithu, who lived at her uncle’s native village.

Next year, Mithu was booked for kidnapping and forcibly marrying Jassi, but she gave a statement

in his favour and later started living with him.

In June that year, contract killers — allegedly hired by Kaur and Badesha — attacked the couple in Sangrur, leaving Jassi dead.

It was first in 2005 that Punjab Police contacted Canada seeking the duo’s extraditio­n.

After a long legal tussle, the Supreme Court of British Columbia ordered their extraditio­n on

September 8 last year. A Punjab Police team reached Vancouver to take their custody and had completed formalitie­s when the court of appeals stayed the order.

Through all these ups and downs, Mithu, who never remarried, stood like a rock. He has been allegedly framed in more than five cases, including one of rape in 2004. Jassi, he says, is the love of his life.

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