UN group urges release of Briton held in India
A UNITED NATIONS working group’s ruling on the “arbitrary detention” of a British Sikh man in India is expected to mount pressure on the UK government to do more to secure his release.
Jagtar Singh Johal, from Dumbarton in Scotland, was arrested by plain-clothes officers in the north Indian state of Punjab in November 2017 while he was shopping with his wife.
He is accused of funding the purchase of weapons used to assassinate Hindu religious and political leaders, an allegation his family has rejected.
Since his arrest in Jalandhar, nine cases have been registered against Johal, who is being held in a Delhi prison without being tried. He said he was tortured and coerced into signing confessions.
A UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention urged the Indian government to release him immediately without setting any conditions, and “accord him an enforceable right to compensation and other reparations” under international laws.
The panel of UN investigators found that Johal’s detention and arrest did not conform to international human rights standards, and that his right to a fair trial was “violated”.
“Johal was targeted because of his activities as a Sikh practitioner and supporter and because of his activism writing public posts calling for accountability for alleged actions committed against Sikhs by the authorities”, the group said.
“He was deprived of his liberty on discriminatory grounds, owing to his status as a human rights defender and based on
his political activism, religious faith and opinions,” it added.
However, the findings contradict India’s stand that there is “sufficient prosecutable evidence” against him and his rights are “duly honoured”.
Johal’s brother Gurpreet Singh, a councillor in Dunbarton who has been running a campaign seeking his release, quoted a Downing Street spokesperson as saying that British prime minister Boris Johnson raised his sibling’s case with his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi during his visit to the country last month.
“We’ve known from the start that there’s no good reason for Jagtar’s imprisonment, and in four years the Indian authorities haven’t produced any evidence against him. The UK government hasn’t listened to us, but perhaps it will listen to the UN and call for his release… We’re dreaming of the moment my brother steps off a plane in Scotland to be reunited with his family,” Singh told the