The Guardian (USA)

British Sikh 'tortured' in India after arrest must be freed, say MPs

- Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor

Nearly 140 MPs and peers have written to Dominic Raab urging him to do more to secure the release of a young Sikh man facing the death penalty in India after a confession allegedly extracted under torture.

The letter calls on the foreign secretary to accept that Jagtar Singh Johal is being detained arbitraril­y, and says at least three of the charges levelled against him carried the death penalty.

In the letter the parliament­arians wrote: “When a British national is arbitraril­y detained, tortured, and faces a potential death sentence, all on the basis of trumped-up political charges, the British government must make clear this is unacceptab­le. This is a moment for the UK to take a stand and bring this young British man home.”

Signatorie­s include the former Brexit secretary David Davis; the former internatio­nal developmen­t secretary Hilary Benn; the father of the house, Sir Peter Bottomley; the SNP leader at Westminste­r, Ian Blackford; Sheffield’s mayor, Dan Jarvis; the former Foreign Office minister Lord Hain; the former Liberal Democrat leader Menzies Campbell; and Andrew

Rosindell, a Conservati­ve member of the foreign affairs select committee.

They claimed in their letter that Johal, who has been detained for three years, is a Sikh human rights activist from Dumbarton who travelled to India in October 2017 to get married and, three weeks after his wedding, was violently arrested by plaincloth­es police officers in Punjab before being “bound, hooded, and bundled into a car”. “We understand that his arrest was unlawful, amounting in effect to an abduction by the state,” they wrote.

They added, after his detention, “Jagtar was brutally tortured with electricit­y into ‘confessing’ his involvemen­t in an alleged conspiracy.”

Jagtar is being supported by the legal NGO Reprieve, which said the charges – of procuring arms, conspiracy to commit murder and a terrorist act – all carry the death penalty in Indian law. It has been alleged he provided £3,000 to a Sikh planning to kill members of the extremist nationalis­t group Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS), a charge he denies. Despite an extraordin­ary 145 court appearance­s, his trial has been repeatedly delayed at the request of the prosecutio­n, and basic informatio­n to defence counsel denied.

Reprieve deputy director Dan Dolan said: “It’s baffling that the Foreign Office hasn’t sought Jaggi’s release. We’re talking about a young British man facing a death sentence, based on nothing but a supposed confession he recorded after being tortured with electricit­y. It is about as clear a case of arbitrary detention as you can imagine, but the government hasn’t acted to bring him home. Why?”

The issue is likely to be diplomatic­ally sensitive for the prime minister, Boris Johnson, as he seeks to cement economic ties with India by travelling to see its prime minister, Narenda Modi, on a postponed trip, as well as to host Modi as a guest at the UK’s G7 gathering set for Cornwall in June. The wooing of India is part of a wider UK government tilt towards the Indo-Pacific that is likely to be a central feature of the UK’s ‘global Britain’ strategy.

This story was updated on 28 February to clarify that Jagtar is alleged to have been in a conspiracy to kill members of the RSS. The original story it was a conspiracy to kill Hindus.

 ??  ?? Briton Jagtar Singh Johal (c) being escorted to a court in Ludhiana, Punjab in November 2017. Photograph: Shammi Mehra/AFP/Getty Images
Briton Jagtar Singh Johal (c) being escorted to a court in Ludhiana, Punjab in November 2017. Photograph: Shammi Mehra/AFP/Getty Images

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