Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Overseas Sikhs still facing blacklists: UK body

- Prasun Sonwalkar prasun.sonwalkar@hindustant­imes.com

LONDON: Despite assurances during the 2015 talks in London between a delegation of Uk-based Sikhs and Prime Minister Narendra Modi, so-called “blacklists” comprising members of the community based abroad are still in place, an interlocut­or during the talks has said.

Individual­s on the blacklists are allegedly refused visas or travel documents to visit India due to their alleged involvemen­t in the Khalistan movement in the 1980s. Abolishing the blacklists was one of key demands of Sikh groups during talks with Modi.

Jasdev Singh Rai of Sikh Human Rights Forum, who described the November 2015 talks as a “breakthrou­gh”, said: “Visa restrictio­n and blacklists of Sikhs are still in place in some countries where local embassies have failed to move forward on lifting them.

“We know cases in Belgium, Holland and Canada, and urge the minister of external affairs to personally oversee these.”

Rai, one of the key interlocut­ors during the talks who has since been involved in follow-up negotiatio­ns in New Delhi, said there has been “some progress” on some issues that were discussed.

“Progress in two major issues raised in London is still awaited. The Indian state still has not released any major Sikh detainee. The release of Davinderpa­l Singh Bhuller and Lal Singh are long overdue as are those of some 17 other detainees,” he said.

“There hasn’t been any government initiative or dialogue in reinstatin­g the internatio­nal engagement of Sri Akal Takht Sahib and Sri Harimandar Sahib and incorporat­ing the worldwide Sikh community in the decision-making process at both central institutio­ns of the Sikhs,” he added.

He, however, said some police officers in Punjab had been sentenced for committing extrajudic­ial executions, adding the recent sentencing of two people for violence against Sikhs during the 1984 riots in Delhi is a welcome developmen­t.

“The London talks were a breakthrou­gh in which Prime Minister Modi gave an undertakin­g to work on the five key broad proposals that were presented to close the gap between the worldwide Sikh community and the Indian state following the attack on Sri Darbar Sahib in June 1984 and the organised pogrom against Sikhs in November 1984 under the Congress Government,” he said.

“After three years there are small punitive steps being taken in some areas but we hope there will be more substantiv­e progress.”

 ?? AFP ?? File photo of a protest rally in London by members of the Sikh community in Britain.
AFP File photo of a protest rally in London by members of the Sikh community in Britain.

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