The Asian Age

‘ After Blue Star, Britain tried to ban Sikh protests’

Papers do not shed any light on alleged British involvemen­t in the operation

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London: The British government led by then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher made several attempts to ban protests by Sikhs in the country following Operation Blue Star in 1984, according to recently declassifi­ed documents. The documents were released after a UK judge had ruled in June that declassify­ing the Downing Street papers would not damage diplomatic ties with India. The papers do not shed any further light on alleged British involvemen­t in the Army operation at the Golden Temple.

London, July 12: The British government led by then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher made several attempts to ban protests by Sikhs in the country following Operation Blue Star in 1984, according to recently declassifi­ed documents.

The documents were released after a UK judge had ruled last month that declassify­ing the Downing Street papers would not damage diplomatic ties with India.

While the papers do not shed any further light on alleged British involvemen­t in the Army operation at the Golden Temple in Amritsar, they reflect a preoccupat­ion with not upsetting then Rajiv Gandhi led government in order to secure lucrative trade deals.

Thatcher’s Foreign Secretary, Sir Geoffrey Howe, wanted Scotland Yard to ban protests planned by British Sikh groups, including socalled Republic of Khalistan, because “a Sikh march in present circumstan­ce would carry very serious risks, both for Indo- British relations and for law and order in this country”.

“It will also further intensify the Indian government’s resentment against the UK and unwillingn­ess of HMG ( Her Majesty’s government), as they see it, to do anything to curb the activities of Sikh extremists in this country. Contracts which would be potentiall­y at risk from a trade boycott amount to some 5 billion pounds,” reads a note to the Home Office by Leonard Appleyard, Geoffrey Howe’s private secretary.

In 1984, the UK was eager to sell its Westland helicopter­s

to India as well as other lucrative arms contracts. At one point, Howe even contemplat­es a change to the UK’s Public Order Act 1936, which prevents a ban on protests

unless they pose a threat to public order.

“There are some disturbing details in the new documents about how some British politician­s tried to disregard the civil liberties of UK Sikhs in order to secure trade with India. But overall it is now clear that the Cabinet Office has managed to avoid releasing any more material about Operation Blue Star,” said Phil Miller, the investigat­ive journalist who had sought the declassifi­cation of the documents through a freedom of informatio­n ( FOI) request. After a longdrawn legal battle, the Informatio­n Tribunal judgment in June had allowed the UK government to continue withholdin­g material relating to the intelligen­ce and security agencies.

“I think many people will be disappoint­ed by the small scale of disclosure after years of legal proceeding­s. This highlights the shortcomin­gs of the UK’s Freedom of Informatio­n Act,” said Mr Miller.

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