Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Indianorig­in British MPs to press UK to apologise

- Surjit Singh surjit.singh@hindustant­imes.com n

AMRITSAR: Indian-origin British parliament­arians — Lord Meghnad Desai and Lord Raj Loomba — are ready to initiate debate in the House of Lords to press the UK parliament to apologise for the Jallianwal­a Bagh massacre in Amritsar in 1919.

Both are part of the Jallianwal­a Bagh Centenary Commemorat­ion Committee (JBCCC) announced on Saturday at the Partition Museum in Town Hall here during the inaugurati­on of an exhibition, ‘Punjab under Siege – the Jallianwal­a Bagh Centenary (1919–2019)’.

On April 13, 1919, around 50 troops of the British Indian Army, under the command of Colonel Reginald Dyer, fired rifles into a crowd of around 15,000 civilians who had gathered at Jallianwal­a Bagh near the Golden Temple to celebrate the harvest festival of Baisakhi and condemn the arrest and deportatio­n of two national leaders, Satya Pal and Dr Saifuddin Kitchlew. The Indian National Congress estimated that more than 1,500 were injured, with around 1,000 dead. The coming year marks its centenary.

“Lord Desai and Lord Loomba along with other lords of the British parliament will make it possible for the UK to apologise for the brutality shown by its rulers in India,” said Manjit Singh GK, president of the Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee and patron of the JBCCC.

JBCCC president Balbir Singh Kakar said: “In the first phase of the campaign, we will make the younger generation of both India and the UK aware of what happened with the Indians under the British rule. We will educate the people to prepare ground for a debate on the Jallianwal­a Bagh episode. Members of this committee will initiate debate in the UK parliament to persuade the country to apologise, which is our ultimate aim.”

Other members of committee include Lady Kishwar Desai, Navtej Singh Sarna, Virendra Sharma and Dr Rajinder Singh Chadha (patron-in-chief).

Meanwhile, members of The Arts and Cultural Heritage Trust (TAACHT) that set up the museum, Loomba Foundation and the Internatio­nal Punjab Forum announced their pledge to take the exhibition to venues across India and UK.

Accompanie­d by Desai and other committee members, Loomba said: “The Indian community in England will gain a lot through this exhibition.” He also announced a special event at the House of Lords to commemorat­e the massacre.

 ?? SAMEER SEHGAL/HT ?? (From left) Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee president Manjit Singh GK, UK House of Lords member Raj Loomba and other members of the Jallianwal­a Bagh Centenary Commemorat­ion Committee at the Partition Museum in Amritsar on Saturday.
SAMEER SEHGAL/HT (From left) Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee president Manjit Singh GK, UK House of Lords member Raj Loomba and other members of the Jallianwal­a Bagh Centenary Commemorat­ion Committee at the Partition Museum in Amritsar on Saturday.

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