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Worldwide Sikh Diaspora approach UN Human Rights Commission regarding proposed hanging of Sikh political prisioner in India

By GURTEJ SINGH
Published: March 23, 2012

With the imminent hanging of Balwant Singh Rajoana; Worldwide Sikh community vow to bring an end to the death penaalty in India

Sikh diaspora protests globally against proposed execution of Bhai Balwant Singh Rajoana
PIL seeks stay on execution of Bhai Balwant Singh Rajoana
We can’t hang Balwant Singh Rajoana: says Patiala Jail authorities; Death warrants returned back
Punjab jail authorities refuse to execute Bhai Balwant Singh Rajoana
London, England (March 23, 2012): As per information available with “Sikh Siyasat” a delegation of Sikhs from a number of countries will later this morning meet with UN officials in Geneva and make a submission to the UN Human Rights Council. The submission will request the UN to take action against India to end the death penalty.

The submission produced by the Sikh Federation (UK) states: ‘the first step is to put pressure on India to endorse the moratorium at the General Assembly of the UN later this year with a view to exerting sufficient pressure so India completely abolishes the death penalty within 12 months.’

Sikhs will also be requesting an immediate public statement from the UN Human Rights Council condemning the imminent execution of Balwant Singh.

The submission produced reads as follows:

More than two-thirds of countries in the world have now abolished the death penalty in law or practice. However, many will be surprised that India, the world’s so-called largest democracy is preparing to break its moratorium on the death penalty by hanging Balwant Singh on 31 March 2012 at 9am in Central Jail, Patiala.

Since the announcement on 13 March thousands of Sikhs have protested across the globe See photographs using the link below from the protest in London on 20 March 2012:

Support Bhai Balwant Singh Rajoana: Sikhs From Across the UK Protest Outside Indian Embassy, London

Similar protests are taking place across Europe, Canada, USA, Australia, New Zealand and India itself. Politicians in different countries are being encouraged to support the campaign.

The protests will culminate in a large Europe-wide demonstration outside the European Parliament in Brussels on Thursday 29 March. Members of the European Parliament from across Europe are expected to join the demonstration and show solidarity with the Sikh community by demanding the time has come for the death penalty in India to come to an end.

Balwant Singh was a close friend of Dilawar Singh, a serving police officer in the Punjab Police who in 1995 killed the then Chief Minister of Punjab, Beant Singh, who was responsible for the mass genocide of the Sikhs in the 1980s and early 1990s.

Other than Balwant Singh a number of Sikhs have been sent to the gallows by India in recent times for their role in targeting the likes of Indira Gandhi and General Vaidya who were directly responsible for the killing of thousands of innocent Sikhs in the Indian army assault on the Golden Temple Complex in June 1984.

In recent years Amnesty International has welcomed the lack of executions in India. Since 1995 there has been only one execution in India in August 2004. Amnesty has expressed its concern that at least 50 death sentences on average are passed each year by the Indian courts. There are currently estimated to be over 400 on death row in India.

If India executes Balwant Singh on 31 March it will signal to the world that when it comes to Sikh political prisoners India is prepared to break the moratorium to target the minority Sikh community and reverse the worldwide trend to abolish the death penalty.

There is a real risk this will open the flood gates and allow India to execute the likes of Professor Davinderpal Singh Bhullar. His case has been highlighted by Amnesty International in two urgent action appeals. He was illegally deported from Germany and has now been in prison for over 17 years and on death row in Tihar Central Prison, New Delhi for over nine years.

The announcement of the imminent execution of Balwant Singh comes on the back of the pre-mature release last month of Kishori Lal, who was awarded three separate death penalties for the murder and decapitation of three innocent Sikhs with a chopper knife on 1 November 1984. Many in the Sikh community feel the Indian authorities are blatantly targeting Sikhs and many countries around the world often stay silent as they do not want to jeopardise trade with India.

What is very clear is when Sikhs have been sent to the gallows the executions have always been politically motivated and designed to teach Sikhs a lesson. However, those that have killed innocent Sikhs and been involved in what can genuinely be called ‘terrorism’ or genocide either are not even prosecuted or as has been demonstrated are spared the death penalty.

The worldwide Sikh community is forming a coalition with governments and NGOs that wish to rid the world of the medieval justice of the death penalty with a specific campaign to end the death penalty in India. The first step is to put pressure on India to endorse the moratorium at the General Assembly of the UN later this year with a view to exerting sufficient pressure so India completely abolishes the death penalty within 12 months. An immediate public statement from the UN Human Rights Council condemning the imminent execution of Balwant Singh would seem appropriate.

The use of the death penalty undermines human dignity. The sheer barbarity of taking another person’s life under sanction of law and taking an ‘eye for an eye’ has no place in a modern, progressive criminal justice system. The Indian State cannot give life so it cannot take it away either. India needs to abolish the death penalty and take a step towards joining the league of civilised countrie

Sikhs should never stayed with India they should have set up their own state. Well never mind better late than never
 
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BS Roajana

Afzal Guru

Rajiv Gandhi's assasisns.

...classic cases of what happpens when vote bank politics kicks in to save condemned terrorists.

This is the weakness of a democracy. Something that we must overcome.

...perhaps in extra-judicial killings lay the salvation?
 
. .
Absolutely- Sikh should get their seperate state... they should start by claiming capital first- Lahore :devil:.. then gradually Pakistani punjab.. My full support to them... :pakistan:

Worldwide Sikh Diaspora approach UN Human Rights Commission regarding proposed hanging of Sikh political prisioner in India

By GURTEJ SINGH
Published: March 23, 2012

With the imminent hanging of Balwant Singh Rajoana; Worldwide Sikh community vow to bring an end to the death penaalty in India

Sikh diaspora protests globally against proposed execution of Bhai Balwant Singh Rajoana
PIL seeks stay on execution of Bhai Balwant Singh Rajoana
We can’t hang Balwant Singh Rajoana: says Patiala Jail authorities; Death warrants returned back
Punjab jail authorities refuse to execute Bhai Balwant Singh Rajoana
London, England (March 23, 2012): As per information available with “Sikh Siyasat” a delegation of Sikhs from a number of countries will later this morning meet with UN officials in Geneva and make a submission to the UN Human Rights Council. The submission will request the UN to take action against India to end the death penalty.

The submission produced by the Sikh Federation (UK) states: ‘the first step is to put pressure on India to endorse the moratorium at the General Assembly of the UN later this year with a view to exerting sufficient pressure so India completely abolishes the death penalty within 12 months.’

Sikhs will also be requesting an immediate public statement from the UN Human Rights Council condemning the imminent execution of Balwant Singh.

The submission produced reads as follows:

More than two-thirds of countries in the world have now abolished the death penalty in law or practice. However, many will be surprised that India, the world’s so-called largest democracy is preparing to break its moratorium on the death penalty by hanging Balwant Singh on 31 March 2012 at 9am in Central Jail, Patiala.

Since the announcement on 13 March thousands of Sikhs have protested across the globe See photographs using the link below from the protest in London on 20 March 2012:

Support Bhai Balwant Singh Rajoana: Sikhs From Across the UK Protest Outside Indian Embassy, London

Similar protests are taking place across Europe, Canada, USA, Australia, New Zealand and India itself. Politicians in different countries are being encouraged to support the campaign.

The protests will culminate in a large Europe-wide demonstration outside the European Parliament in Brussels on Thursday 29 March. Members of the European Parliament from across Europe are expected to join the demonstration and show solidarity with the Sikh community by demanding the time has come for the death penalty in India to come to an end.

Balwant Singh was a close friend of Dilawar Singh, a serving police officer in the Punjab Police who in 1995 killed the then Chief Minister of Punjab, Beant Singh, who was responsible for the mass genocide of the Sikhs in the 1980s and early 1990s.

Other than Balwant Singh a number of Sikhs have been sent to the gallows by India in recent times for their role in targeting the likes of Indira Gandhi and General Vaidya who were directly responsible for the killing of thousands of innocent Sikhs in the Indian army assault on the Golden Temple Complex in June 1984.

In recent years Amnesty International has welcomed the lack of executions in India. Since 1995 there has been only one execution in India in August 2004. Amnesty has expressed its concern that at least 50 death sentences on average are passed each year by the Indian courts. There are currently estimated to be over 400 on death row in India.

If India executes Balwant Singh on 31 March it will signal to the world that when it comes to Sikh political prisoners India is prepared to break the moratorium to target the minority Sikh community and reverse the worldwide trend to abolish the death penalty.

There is a real risk this will open the flood gates and allow India to execute the likes of Professor Davinderpal Singh Bhullar. His case has been highlighted by Amnesty International in two urgent action appeals. He was illegally deported from Germany and has now been in prison for over 17 years and on death row in Tihar Central Prison, New Delhi for over nine years.

The announcement of the imminent execution of Balwant Singh comes on the back of the pre-mature release last month of Kishori Lal, who was awarded three separate death penalties for the murder and decapitation of three innocent Sikhs with a chopper knife on 1 November 1984. Many in the Sikh community feel the Indian authorities are blatantly targeting Sikhs and many countries around the world often stay silent as they do not want to jeopardise trade with India.

What is very clear is when Sikhs have been sent to the gallows the executions have always been politically motivated and designed to teach Sikhs a lesson. However, those that have killed innocent Sikhs and been involved in what can genuinely be called ‘terrorism’ or genocide either are not even prosecuted or as has been demonstrated are spared the death penalty.

The worldwide Sikh community is forming a coalition with governments and NGOs that wish to rid the world of the medieval justice of the death penalty with a specific campaign to end the death penalty in India. The first step is to put pressure on India to endorse the moratorium at the General Assembly of the UN later this year with a view to exerting sufficient pressure so India completely abolishes the death penalty within 12 months. An immediate public statement from the UN Human Rights Council condemning the imminent execution of Balwant Singh would seem appropriate.

The use of the death penalty undermines human dignity. The sheer barbarity of taking another person’s life under sanction of law and taking an ‘eye for an eye’ has no place in a modern, progressive criminal justice system. The Indian State cannot give life so it cannot take it away either. India needs to abolish the death penalty and take a step towards joining the league of civilised countrie

Sikhs should never stayed with India they should have set up their own state. Well never mind better late than never
 
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anybody doing protests in foreign land do not bother us, we only care abt indian sikhs. so if some canadian, british or american sikhs are protesting let them protest.
 
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Sikhs should never stayed with India they should have set up their own state. Well never mind better late than never

Ahhaa!

Pakistani love for Sikhs on display once again.

Wonder where was this love when it was Muslims vs (sikhs+Hindus) during the bloodbath of 1947.

What the Pakistanis fail to see, or shall I say choose to not see, is that since the beginning of Sikhism, Sikhs have always been with Hindus and Hindus have always been with Sikhs against the tyranny of western powers be them Mughals or British, to us both were symbols of tyranny and malice from the west.

We have always together fought against both, the white man and the Islamic supremacists.

Sikhs and Hindus have always been together in this.

I can imagine the amount of heartburn it causes across the border.

Sikhs and separatists in India must be supplied and assisted by all good neighbours of India.

For God's sake, stop whining, grow a pair of ba**s and just bl**dy do it.

You do know that there was a massive rally by JSQM in Sindh a day before, don't you?
 
. .
BS Roajana

Afzal Guru

Rajiv Gandhi's assasisns.

...classic cases of what happpens when vote bank politics kicks in to save condemned terrorists.

This is the weakness of a democracy. Something that we must overcome.

...perhaps in extra-judicial killings lay the salvation?

this is the sorry state of indian politics. if a person to be hanged is not from their community, region or ethnicity ppl don't care but if same person is from their community, region or ethnicity then ppl start protesting. general ppl are not to be blamed coz they become fool at the hands of political parties or religious orz. i think in coming years govt have to end death penalty coz of political pressure from all over india & mind u ajmal kasab cannot be hanged until all those who are in the line before him. this the the rule & i don't think we will ever see him hanged to death.
 
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Worldwide Sikh Diaspora approach UN Human Rights Commission regarding proposed hanging of Sikh political prisioner in India

By GURTEJ SINGH
Published: March 23, 2012

With the imminent hanging of Balwant Singh Rajoana; Worldwide Sikh community vow to bring an end to the death penaalty in India

Sikh diaspora protests globally against proposed execution of Bhai Balwant Singh Rajoana
PIL seeks stay on execution of Bhai Balwant Singh Rajoana
We can’t hang Balwant Singh Rajoana: says Patiala Jail authorities; Death warrants returned back
Punjab jail authorities refuse to execute Bhai Balwant Singh Rajoana
London, England (March 23, 2012): As per information available with “Sikh Siyasat” a delegation of Sikhs from a number of countries will later this morning meet with UN officials in Geneva and make a submission to the UN Human Rights Council. The submission will request the UN to take action against India to end the death penalty.

The submission produced by the Sikh Federation (UK) states: ‘the first step is to put pressure on India to endorse the moratorium at the General Assembly of the UN later this year with a view to exerting sufficient pressure so India completely abolishes the death penalty within 12 months.’

Sikhs will also be requesting an immediate public statement from the UN Human Rights Council condemning the imminent execution of Balwant Singh.

The submission produced reads as follows:

More than two-thirds of countries in the world have now abolished the death penalty in law or practice. However, many will be surprised that India, the world’s so-called largest democracy is preparing to break its moratorium on the death penalty by hanging Balwant Singh on 31 March 2012 at 9am in Central Jail, Patiala.

Since the announcement on 13 March thousands of Sikhs have protested across the globe See photographs using the link below from the protest in London on 20 March 2012:

Support Bhai Balwant Singh Rajoana: Sikhs From Across the UK Protest Outside Indian Embassy, London

Similar protests are taking place across Europe, Canada, USA, Australia, New Zealand and India itself. Politicians in different countries are being encouraged to support the campaign.

The protests will culminate in a large Europe-wide demonstration outside the European Parliament in Brussels on Thursday 29 March. Members of the European Parliament from across Europe are expected to join the demonstration and show solidarity with the Sikh community by demanding the time has come for the death penalty in India to come to an end.

Balwant Singh was a close friend of Dilawar Singh, a serving police officer in the Punjab Police who in 1995 killed the then Chief Minister of Punjab, Beant Singh, who was responsible for the mass genocide of the Sikhs in the 1980s and early 1990s.

Other than Balwant Singh a number of Sikhs have been sent to the gallows by India in recent times for their role in targeting the likes of Indira Gandhi and General Vaidya who were directly responsible for the killing of thousands of innocent Sikhs in the Indian army assault on the Golden Temple Complex in June 1984.

In recent years Amnesty International has welcomed the lack of executions in India. Since 1995 there has been only one execution in India in August 2004. Amnesty has expressed its concern that at least 50 death sentences on average are passed each year by the Indian courts. There are currently estimated to be over 400 on death row in India.

If India executes Balwant Singh on 31 March it will signal to the world that when it comes to Sikh political prisoners India is prepared to break the moratorium to target the minority Sikh community and reverse the worldwide trend to abolish the death penalty.

There is a real risk this will open the flood gates and allow India to execute the likes of Professor Davinderpal Singh Bhullar. His case has been highlighted by Amnesty International in two urgent action appeals. He was illegally deported from Germany and has now been in prison for over 17 years and on death row in Tihar Central Prison, New Delhi for over nine years.

The announcement of the imminent execution of Balwant Singh comes on the back of the pre-mature release last month of Kishori Lal, who was awarded three separate death penalties for the murder and decapitation of three innocent Sikhs with a chopper knife on 1 November 1984. Many in the Sikh community feel the Indian authorities are blatantly targeting Sikhs and many countries around the world often stay silent as they do not want to jeopardise trade with India.

What is very clear is when Sikhs have been sent to the gallows the executions have always been politically motivated and designed to teach Sikhs a lesson. However, those that have killed innocent Sikhs and been involved in what can genuinely be called ‘terrorism’ or genocide either are not even prosecuted or as has been demonstrated are spared the death penalty.

The worldwide Sikh community is forming a coalition with governments and NGOs that wish to rid the world of the medieval justice of the death penalty with a specific campaign to end the death penalty in India. The first step is to put pressure on India to endorse the moratorium at the General Assembly of the UN later this year with a view to exerting sufficient pressure so India completely abolishes the death penalty within 12 months. An immediate public statement from the UN Human Rights Council condemning the imminent execution of Balwant Singh would seem appropriate.

The use of the death penalty undermines human dignity. The sheer barbarity of taking another person’s life under sanction of law and taking an ‘eye for an eye’ has no place in a modern, progressive criminal justice system. The Indian State cannot give life so it cannot take it away either. India needs to abolish the death penalty and take a step towards joining the league of civilised countrie

Sikhs should never stayed with India they should have set up their own state. Well never mind better late than never
ranting from an irrelevant blog
 
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He should have though about death penalty before killing punjab cm.
 
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Personal attacks?? I am just stating my opinion. I believe that all separatists in India should be assisted to overthrow tyranny
it should go same for pakistan also, every neighboring country should support balochistan,sindhudesh etc etc if not its called hypocracy:whistle:
 
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Actually, mate, it's a pretty frank assessment.

Like it or not, in fact I don't know if you realise it or not, you've quite literally grown horns over the past few days, especially since you paid for the premium membership and acquired it.

I hope it's a temprorary passing phase of negativity in your life, not to mean that I'd care even if it wasn't, not unless I'm paying for it out my own pocket. God bless. :cheers:

1. I never paid for it.

2. I was given it months ago.

3. i didn't ask for this.

Lastly the negativity and supporting insurgents against in India is in response to some of the hatred I have come accross for Pakistanis on here by Indians.

Take care

it should go same for pakistan also, every neighboring country should support balochistan,sindhudesh etc etc if not its called hypocracy:whistle:

Your govt is why do you think India has so many consulates in Afghanistan and send terrorists into Pakistan
 
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Indian_Army-Sikh_Light_Infantry_regiment.jpeg



Indian_army_soldier_aim.jpg



one target in mind anyone care to guess which country the gun is for? :)
 
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