|
|
«« Back |
 |
Light a candle for 4,733 Sikhs slaughtered by Congress hoods
Light a candle for 4,733 Sikhs slaughtered
by Congress hoods
Author: Kanchan Gupta
Publication: Rediff on Net
Date: November 1, 2004
URL: http://in.rediff.com/news/2004/nov/01kanch.htm
This week, light a candle in your
window. And whisper a silent prayer in memory of more than 4,000 Sikh men,
women and children slaughtered by Congress hoodlums 20 years ago. In Delhi
alone, 2,733 Sikhs were burned alive, butchered or beaten to death.
Women were raped while their terrified
families pleaded for mercy, little or none of which was shown by the Congress
flag-bearers. In one of the numerous such incidents, a woman was gang-raped
in front of her 17- year-old son; before leaving, the marauders torched
the boy.
For three days and nights the killing
and pillaging continued without the police, the civil administration and
the Union government, which was then in direct charge of Delhi, lifting
a finger in admonishment. The Congress was in power, and senior Congress
leaders, perhaps for the first time in their political careers, led from
the front while the prime minister, his home minister, indeed the entire
council of ministers, twiddled their thumbs.
Even as stray dogs gorged on rotting
human entrails, gutters were clogged with charred corpses and wailing women,
clutching children too frightened to cry, fled baying mobs armed with iron
rods, staves and gallons of kerosene, All India Radio and Doordarshan kept
on broadcasting blood-curdling slogans of 'Khoon ka badla khoon se lenge'
(We shall avenge blood with blood) raised by Congress party workers grieving
over their dear departed leader, India Gandhi.
Rajiv Gandhi, having ensconced
himself as prime minister, later sought to justify the terror unleashed
by his party. Addressing a rally at Delhi's Boat Club to celebrate his
mother's birth anniversary, he thundered: 'When a big tree falls, the earth
will shake.' And shake it did!
In mid-morning on October 31, 1984,
Indira Gandhi was assassinated by two Sikh guards posted at her home. The
assassins, Satwant Singh and Beant Singh, later said they had killed the
prime minister to avenge the Indian Army's assault on the Golden Temple
-- Operation Bluestar - - at her explicit instruction on June 5 that year.
Beant Singh was killed by the Indo Tibetan Border Police soon after Indira
Gandhi's assassination. Satwant Singh and an alleged accomplice, Kehar
Singh, against whom there was thin evidence, were executed for the crime.
Indira Gandhi's death was officially
confirmed by All India Radio and Doordarshan at 6 pm, after due dilligence
had been exercised to ensure Rajiv Gandhi's succession. By then, stray
incidents of violence against Sikhs, including the stoning of President
Zail Singh's car, had started trickling in at various police stations.
That night, the Congress party
machinery went into a rumour-mongering overdrive: in colony after colony
(Delhi, the seat of India's colonial rulers, is a sprawling conglomerate
of 'colonies,' some upmarket, most little more than shanty towns), rumours
spread like wildfire, describing in graphic details how 'Sikhs were distributing
sweets to celebrate Indira Gandhi's assassination,' how 'gurdwaras had
been lit up as if it were Diwali,' and, how 'Sikh terrorists had infiltrated
the city.'
By the morning of November 1, hordes
of men, shouting Congress slogans, had started running riot in south, east
and west Delhi. They were armed with iron rods and carried old tyres and
jerry cans filled with kerosene and petrol. Owners of gas stations and
kerosene stores, beneficiaries of Congress largesse, provided petrol and
kerosene free of cost. Some of the men went around on scooters and motorcycles,
marking Sikh houses and business establishments with chalk for easy identification.
They had been provided with electoral rolls by their political masters
to make the task easier.
By late afternoon that day, hundreds
of taxis, trucks and shops owned by Sikhs had been set ablaze. By early
evening, the killing, loot and rape began in right earnest. The worst butchery
took place in Block 32 of Trilokpuri, a resettlement colony in east Delhi.
Scores of families were killed over November 1 and 2: most of them were
despatched by putting burning tyres around theirs necks.
The pogrom continued with the active
abetment of the police. On November 1, some residents of Lajpat Nagar took
out a peace march to thwart the violence. The police stopped the march
because the participants did not have 'official permission.' In many places,
police asked Sikhs to hand over their kirpans, took them away forcibly
if the Sikhs refused, before the marauders descended upon them.
To prevent Sikhs from taking refuge
in gurdwaras, most of Delhi's 450 gurdwaras were sacked in the early hours
of the violence. The expedient means of setting houses ablaze was used
to get at Sikh families who had taken refuge on the roofs of their homes.
Entire families were roasted alive.
A sort-of curfew was imposed in
south and central Delhi at 4 pm on November 1. But no action was taken
in east and west Delhi and the outlying area of Palam where the massacre
of Sikhs was being carried out with macabre ferocity and astounding impunity.
Curfew was imposed in east and west Delhi at 6 pm, ensuring that the killers
had an extra four hours.
P V Narasimha Rao, who was the
home minister and responsible for maintaining law and order in Delhi during
those dark days, was fully aware of what was happening. But he chose not
to deploy the army in time which could have prevented the pogrom. In his
affidavit submitted to the G T Nanavati Commission, inquiring into the
pogrom, Lieutenant General Jagjit Singh Aurora, much decorated hero of
the 1971 war, has said, 'The home minister was grossly negligent in his
approach, which clearly reflected his connivance with perpetrators of the
heinous crimes being committed against the Sikhs.'
The army was alerted at 2.30 pm
on November 1; when the General Officer Commanding went to meet the lieutenant
governor for orders, he was kept waiting for an hour. The first deployment
of army jawans took place around 6 pm on November 1 in south and central
Delhi, which were comparatively unaffected, but in the absence of navigators
which should have been provided by the police and the civil authorities,
the jawans found themselves lost in unfamiliar roads and avenues. The army
was deployed in east and west Delhi in the afternoon of November 2. But,
here, too, jawans were at a loss because there were no navigators to show
them the way through byzantine lanes.
In any event, there was little
the army could have done: magistrates were 'not available' to give permission
to the jawans to fire on the mobs. This mandatory requirement was kept
pending till Indira Gandhi's funeral was over. By then, 1,026 Sikhs had
been killed in east Delhi, the majority of the dead were residents of Block
32 in Trilokpuri.
The slaughter was not limited to
Delhi. Sikhs were killed in Gurgaon, Kanpur, Bokaro, Indore and many other
towns and cities across India. In a replay of the blood-letting in Delhi,
26 Sikh jawans and officers of the Indian Army were pulled out of trains
and killed. There has been no effort to compute the death toll in these
places, but the most conservative estimates have placed it at 2,000.
After quenching their thirst for
blood, the brave leaders of the Congress and their foot soldiers retreated
to savour their deeds of revenge. The flames died, the smoke from smouldering
shops and homes lifted and the winter air blew away the stench of death.
Rajiv Gandhi's government, in a casual aside, issued an official statement
placing the death toll at 425.
Atal Bihari Vajpayee, who was then
president of the Bharatiya Janata Party, had instructed party leaders in
Delhi to organise relief camps and provide succour to the survivors of
the pogrom. Madan Lal Khurana and Vijay Kumar Malhotra had braved the marauders
to move from colony to colony, giving whatever help they could. Vajpayee
contested the official death toll and asked his colleagues to collate figures.
Their total added up to 2,800. 'The BJP is an anti-national party,' responded
the Congress.
There were demands for a judicial
inquiry to fix responsibility and add up the casualties. Rajiv Gandhi stonewalled
these demands. Human rights organisations petitioned the courts. Rajiv
Gandhi's government declared that courts were not empowered to order inquiries.
Meanwhile, Rajiv Gandhi dissolved
the Lok Sabha and went for an early general election. The Congress launched
a vitriolic hate campaign through advertisements and posters ('Can you
trust a Sikh taxi driver?'). In Rajiv Gandhi's constituency, Congress party
workers raised a rather telling slogan against his opponent and sister-in-law,
Maneka Gandhi: 'Beti hai Sardar ki, qaum hai gaddar ki' (She is the daughter
of a Sikh, a community of traitors).
Rajiv Gandhi rode the crest of
a gigantic 'sympathy wave.' The Congress won 401 seats in the Lok Sabha.
The BJP was reduced to two seats, punished for sympathising with the Sikhs.
By 1985, Punjab was fast slipping
into a bottomless spiral of secessionist violence and Rajiv Gandhi was
desperate to show a breakthrough. He mollycoddled Akali leader Sant Harchand
Singh Longowal into agreeing to sign a peace accord with him. Sant Longowal
listed a set of pre-conditions; one of them was the setting up of a judicial
inquiry into the anti-Sikh pogrom. Political expediency made Rajiv Gandhi
concede this and other demands (it is another matter that the accord foundered
and Sant Longowal was assassinated by terrorists).
Thus was born the Ranganath Mishra
Commission that shall remain known forever for white-washing official complicity
and political patronage without which the slaughter of Sikhs would not
have been possible. Submissions and affidavits were surreptiously passed
on to those accused of leading the mobs to facilitate their defence. Some
of these documents were later recovered from the house of Sajjan Kumar,
one of the Congress leaders who had been accused by victims in their signed
affidavits. Gag orders were issued, preventing the press from reporting
in-camera proceedings of the Commission.
For full six months, Rajiv Gandhi
refused to make public the Ranganath Mishra Commission's report. When it
was tabled in Parliament, the report was found to be an amazing travesty
of the truth, an exercise that was dedicated to drawing a bizarre distinction
between Congress party workers and the Congress party -- the former were
guilty, but not the latter; no responsibility was fixed nor were the guilty
named.
Subsequently, three other committees
were set up: the Jain-Banerji Committee to find out why cases were not
registered by the police and, if registered, why was it not done properly;
the Kapoor-Mittal Committee to look into the role of the police; and, the
Ahuja Committee to compute the number of deaths. The findings of the first
two committees are gathering dust in some corner of South Block.
The key finding of the Ahuja Committee
is of relevance -- a total of 2,733 Sikhs were killed in Delhi. There is
no record of an apology being offered by either Rajiv Gandhi or his government
for placing the death toll at 425, leave alone for their description of
the BJP as 'anti-national' because it had placed the figure at 2,800.
In these 20 years, nine commissions
and committees have been set up to look into different aspects of the anti-Sikh
pogrom. Much bluster has been heard about bringing the guilty to book.
What we have seen is inertia, political intervention and tardy prosecution.
Overwhelming evidence against Sajjan Kumar, Jagdish Tytler and H K L Bhagat
has been set aside by skulduggery and gerrymandering.
Two thousand seven hundred and
thirty-three men, women and children killed in Delhi, another 2,000 killed
in other towns and cities, scores of women raped, property worth crores
of rupees looted or sacked. Families devastated forever, survivors scarred
for the rest of their lives.
After 20 years, all that we have
to show as justice being done is the conviction of six men, who did not
have the requisite financial or political clout to manipulate their way
to freedom and are serving sentence for 'murder.'
Sajjan Kumar is back in business
as a Congress member of the Lok Sabha; Jagdish Tytler is minister for NRI
affairs in the UPA government.
Those who survived the pogrom of
1984, haunted by nightmares of a genocide the world has forgotten, wipe
their tears in silence.
Back
Top
|
 |
«« Back |
|
|
|
|
|