The Tribune – Young granthi shot dead

P K Jaiswar & Gurbaxpuri

Tarn Taran, April 4. Stopping thieves from stealing a motorcycle from outside the main entrance of Darbar Sahib here proved fatal for a young granthi of the shrine.

Sukhchain Singh (28) was shot dead by armed thieves who fled, abandoning the motorcycle, after the crime. Sukhchain was rushed to the local Civil Hospital which referred him to Guru Nanak Dev Hospital, Amritsar. He died on the way.

The gurdwara management shut its offices in protest against the incident that occurred at about 6.30 am.

Sukhchain spotted two youths taking away a motorcycle that reportedly belonged to a devotee. Sukhchain got suspicious and walked towards them to make enquires. The youths took out their weapon and shot him in the chest. They fled through the gurdwara’s langar hall.

Manmohanjit Singh, a gurdwara employee, and Mukhtar Singh Randhawa, a devotee, rushed the injured granthi to the local Civil Hospital.

Sewadar Nirvail Singh tried to stop the fleeing youths but in vain. The criminals intercepted a motorcyclist and forced him to drive them towards Amritsar. As they neared Thathi Khara village , 4 km from here, they got down and left in a Zen car waiting for them. Arjun Singh, gurdwara manager, has urged the police to take stringent action against the attackers.

Manminder Singh, Tarn Taran SSP, said the police had registered a case under Sections 302, 511, 379 and 34, IPC, and Sections 25/54and 59 of the Arms Act. Akal Takht Jatheda Gurbachan Singh and SGPC chief Avtar Singh has condemned the incident.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120405/punjab.htm#19

The Tribune – Harpreet Kaur Case; The tragic story of teenage love & a stature-conscious mother; Why Bibi Jagir Kaur was convicted

Saurabh Malik, Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, April 4. She opened the book of love when she was still learning to figure out geometry theorems and understand Newton’s laws of motion. For the bubbly Harpreet Kaur, every action had an equal and opposite reaction when it came to affection. She was at that time studying in Sant Prem Singh Khalsa High School at Begowal with Kamaljit Singh’s younger brother Simarjit.

Her story is not very different from a Bollywood blockbuster script…. A teenager in love; an intimacy manifesting itself physically and a stature-conscious mother.

But not even a star scriptwriter could have spun such a gory tale of intrigue and cruelty. The Tribune culls out facts from the judgment to reproduce the events that led to Harpreet Kaur’s forcible abortion and Bibi Jagir Kaur’s five-year rigorous imprisonment sentence.

Teenage love

During the course of trial, Kamaljeet Singh and his sisters Manjit Kaur and Paramjit Kaur deposed that their younger brother was studying with Harpreet Kaur “and she started visiting their residence and came in contact with Kamaljeet Singh”.

School headmaster Mann Singh, too, deposed they were together in class.

“The testimony of Mann Singh together with the school record leaves no manner of doubt that the school was co-educational and Simranjit Singh and Harpreet Kaur had been class-fellows, studying in Class X during the academic session 1996-97,” the trial Judge Balbir Singh ruled.

Soon after Class X examination came the season of separation. Bibi shifted to Chandigarh in 1997 and Harpreet shifted to Shivalik Public School in Sector 41, Chandigarh.

The Separation

But the space between the lovers did not increase with distance. Phone calls kept them together. “The oral and documentary evidence is sufficient to prove that there had been regular telephone contact between Harpreet Kaur from her landline number of Chandigarh with complainant Kamaljit Singh,” the Judge held.

And then there were love letters. They were addressed to Kamaljit by his nickname “Kamal” and “Tinku”. A teenager in love, she adopted Kamaljit’s surname.

“These writings of Harpreet Kaur clearly bring out the factum of love affair that continued between Kamaljit Singh and Harpreet Kaur, despite her shifting from Begowal to Chandigarh,” the Judge asserted.

Behind-the-curtain meetings too were going on. Kamaljit Singh told the court that he would stay at the Janta Tourist Bungalow and Motel Oasis during his visits to Chandigarh where Harpreet would meet him. He too would go to her residence in Sector 39, Chandigarh.

Referring to the statement of prosecution witnesses and check-in registers, the Judge ruled these “leave no manner of doubt that visits of Kamaljit Singh to Chandigarh and his short stays, after coming late evening and leaving by next day, could not possibly be in connection with any business activity and rather were with the sole object of meeting Harpreet Kaur…”.

The Judge went on to add: “I find that oral and documentary evidence is sufficient to hold that as a result of the love affair, physical intimacy developed between Kamaljit Singh and Harpreet Kaur, which then resulted in her pregnancy”.

The Discovery

Harpreet grew and so did her love for “Kamal”. In February 2000, gynaecologist Dr Jyoti Rana confirmed that Harpreet was four months pregnant. “Harpreet Kaur at that time had already completed her plus two and was preparing for medical entrance examination and was staying in the official accommodation of accused Bibi Jagir Kaur. Therefore, it was most natural that the accused, being the mother, was most likely to have noticed the pregnancy because of the normal body changes that take place at that stage as she was already aware of the continued love affair, which did not have her approval…,” the Judge said.

He said: “It was natural for the accused Bibi Jagir Kaur to have been greatly upset… because the exposure of Harpreet’s pregnancy would have ruined her political career…. The accused having attained such an important political and religious stature could not afford to lose her status ”. The Judge further added: “Bibi Jagir Kaur, who was against the marriage of Harpreet Kaur with Kamaljit Singh, who was a commoner, having no social and political reckoning, had the motive to terminate the Harpreet’s pregnancy in order to safeguard her political career and also her high social and religious status as the SGPC president”.

The Conspiracy

Judge Balbir Singh minced no words to say: “A conspiracy was hatched for terminating Harpreet’s pregnancy with accused Bibi Jagir Kaur. However, because the status, political and social, of Bibi was to be safeguarded at all costs, the latter distanced herself from the process of executing the conspiracy and accused Dalwinder Kaur Dheshi, Paramjit Singh Raipur and Nishan Singh, along with approver Dr Balwinder Singh Sohal, took upon themselves to accomplish the object of conspiracy by keeping Bibi Jagir Kaur informed of the developments from time to time”.

Dhesi was Bibi’s “trusted friend” and related to Paramjit Singh Raipur, who was Bibi’s political confidant. A non-resident Indian, she was “keeping residence at Jasdil Mansion”. Nishan Singh, her personal security officer, was also related to her.

“For achieving the object of the conspiracy, that is terminating the pregnancy, assistance of a doctor was required.

Therefore, for entrusting the said task, Dr Balwinder Singh Sohal, who was under the obligation of Bibi because of his employment at the dispensary of Dera Sant Prem Singh and was in touch with the family of the accused, was the natural choice.”

He was asked to find a solution as Harpreet was still unmarried and unwilling to go in for an abortion. He then consulted staff nurse Dalbir Kaur, known to him since long.

The Execution

Hard and ruthless… this was one side of her mother Harpeet had never seen. So when she was taken to Sector 22 for “wedding shopping” and offered chaat laced with sedatives, there was no way the teenager could have suspected that her mother was not sleeping over her pregnancy issue and she would wake up to find the foetus aborted.

The court held: “The testimony of the prosecution witnesses that Harpreet Kaur was brought from her residence, on the pretext of shopping for wedding, at Patiala by accused Dalwinder Kaur Dhesi is probable because otherwise she might have not accompanied Dhesi. Even Rajneet Kaur, her younger sister, was taken along with her because of which she possibly could not have suspected the intended motive of the accused for taking her away”.

The conspiracy was apparently well-planned. The sedative was mixed with chat to mask its smell. “Even the manner of administering six or seven tablets of Trika in powdered form after mixing the same with the chat (given) to Harpreet Kaur for inducing sedation is acceptable…”, the Judge observed.

The judgment goes on to say: “There is no difficulty in accepting the version given by the approver regarding the clandestine manner in which Harpreet Kaur on the very early morning of March 19, 2000, was taken under sedation from Jasdil Mansion (Phagwara) in a vehicle by accused Dalwinder Kaur Dhesi and Paramjit Singh Raipur, along with the approver, directly to Kapurthala at the clinic of Dalbir Kaur, staff nurse in the committee bazaar, where Dr Satpal, her husband was also present.

“According to the approver, he informed Dr Satpal that the pregnancy was to be terminated as the girl was unmarried…. Dr Satpal and his wife Dalbir Kaur took Harpreet Kaur to the delivery room while she was still unconscious and. Dalbir Kaur and Dr Satpal administered medicine to Harpeet. They told him that the process would be lengthy and they had injected medicine and abortion might take place within 24 hours and 72 hours….”

After the abortion, Harpreet was brought to Jasdil Mansion in a clandestine manner by Dhesi and Raipur. Their arrival was followed by a phone call on Dalbit Kaur’s landline number and this was a mistake on the part of the accused.

The judge asserted that a call was made from Raipur’s mobile to the landline “probably intimating that the accused and Harpreet Kaur had reached Phagwara safely…”

The Death

Almost a month later came the tragic end to the catastrophic love story. On the fateful evening of April 20, 2000, Harpreet started vomiting. Loose motions followed, resulting in acute dehydration. At about 9.45 pm, Bibi Jagir Kaur called up Dr Tarsem Singh asking him to immediately proceeding towards Phagwara to attend to her ailing daughter Harpreet Kaur”. No connection between the illness and the previous incident was established.

The doctor was known to the family because he was treating Harpreet’s sister for epilepsy. But during the trial, the CBI failed to tie the loose ends and the Judge ruled: “It cannot be said by any stretch of imagination that accused Bibi Jagir Kaur developed a strong motive for eliminating Harpreet Kaur…”

Appreciating the evidence, the Judge added: “The prosecution has been able to prove that accused Dalwinder Kaur Dhesi, Paramjit Singh Raipur and Nishan Singh abducted Harpreet Kaur, who was a major, by deceitful means…. The prosecution has further been able to prove that accused Dalwinder Kaur Dhesi and Paramjit Singh Raipur got Harpreet’s pregnancy terminated without her consent after keeping her under sedation and this was not done in good faith or for saving her life”.

The Judge acquitted Bibi and others of the murder charge, but sentencing them to five years for offences ranging from “causing miscarriage without the woman’s consent” and criminal conspiracy. Among the convicted are Bibi’s trusted friend Dhesi, her confidant Paramjit Singh Raipur and PSO Nishan Singh.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120405/main6.htm

The Asian Age – Saeed taunts US: ‘Why not kill me like Osama?’

Rezaul H Laskar

Islamabad, 5 April 2012. A combative Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, Jamaat-ud-Dawah chief, on Wednesday dared the United States to carry out a military raid against him like the one that killed Osama bin Laden, saying he was not hiding and would inform the Americans himself about his whereabouts.

Saeed said this while addressing a press conference with other leaders of the “Defa-e-Pakistan Council” at Flashman Hotel in Rawalpindi, close to the headquarters of the Pakistan Army. This was his first press conference after the US government announced a $10 million reward for his capture on Monday.

He even taunted the US to give him the bounty offered for him under the “Rewards for Justice” programme, saying he would himself inform the US authorities about his whereabouts. “I am not hiding in caves and mountains, I am here in Rawalpindi,” he said.

Saeed offered to disclose his itinerary for the next few days: he would go to Narowal in Punjab later Wednesday, and then to Lahore on Thursday. He said if the United States gave him the $10 million, he would use it in the impoverished province of Balochistan, and account for its expenditure. (PTI)

http://www.asianage.com/india/saeed-taunts-us-why-not-kill-me-osama-289

19 February 2012 – Vilvoorde visit

On the 19th of February I went to Vilvoorde to introduce tw0 people of Internationaal Comité Brussel and Leuven to the president of the  Vilvoorde Gurdwara

Brussel Noord – This Austrian rolling stock in now used by NS (Netherlands Railways) on some of the Amsterdam – Brussel trains

Brussel Noord - Waiting for the Mechelen train, which will take me to Vilvoorde


Vilvoorde – Young conductor, old train

Vilvoorde – Church
O.L.Vr. van Goede Hoop
Our Lady of Good Hope


Vilvoorde – Church
O.L.Vr. van Goede Hoop
Our Lady of Good Hope

To see more Belgium (mostly Limburg) pictures :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157622046344528/

To see more Belgium and Netherlands public transport pictures :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157622685920411/

More Belgium pictures to follow
Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

The Tribune – Anand Marriage Act Row; Centre proposes religion neutral marriage law

Tarlochan writes protest letter to Law Minister

Aditi Tandon, Tribune News Service

New Delhi, April 4. After wrangling with the Centre for years over their demand for changes to the Anand Marriage Act to allow for compulsory registration of Sikh marriages, the community leaders today hit back at the UPA Government for yet another attempt to ignore their aspirations.

Rejecting the law Ministry’s new proposal to amend the Births and Deaths Registration Act, 1969, to include marriage registration without the requirement of listing religions, Tarlochan Singh, former chairperson, National Minorities Commission, today said the move was unacceptable to the Sikhs who had long awaited a separate marriage registration law to cement their identity at home and abroad.

In a protest letter to Law Minister Salman Khursheed, whose ministry is said to be finalising the proposed amendment to the Birth and Death Registration law to allow couples an option of registering religion neutral marriages, Tarlochan Singh said: “All Sikh MPs have made an appeal to the government to amend the Anand Marriage Act to allow for registration of Sikh marriages currently registered under the Hindu Marriage Act.

“Your new proposal will not give any help to five million Sikh NRIs who are facing threats to their identity abroad. If their marriage certificates don’t conform to their religious beliefs or reflect their Sikh identity, how will they get justice from the foreign governments?”

The Centre seems to be reverting to the position Khursheed articulated in a written reply to a related question in the Rajya Sabha on August 30, 2011.

At that time, conveying the Centre’s decision to drop the Sikhs’ demand for amendments to the Anand Karaj Act, the Law
Minister had said: “Since the scope of the Anand Marriage Act, 1909 is limited to marriage ceremonies amongst “anands”, the registration of all forms of Sikh marriages is not within its scope. Further, there may not be any justification for secluding Sikhs from Hindus, Jains and Buddhists as such a step would invite similar demands from these religious denominations covered under the Hindu Marriage Act.

“Also, seclusion of one community is against the directive principles contained in Article 44 of the Constitution which aims at bringing in a uniform civil code.”

Sikhs have been seeking changes to the Anand Karaj Act to include a clause for the registration of their marriages. Similar Acts exist to allow for separate registration of marriages in case of Muslims, Christians, Parsis and Jews.

“As per the Centre’s new proposal, marriages would be registered without mentioning the religion of the couple. But this will never satisfy the aspirations of Sikh minority which has been getting assurances for the last several years that a registration clause would be added to the Anand Marriage Act,” Tarlochan Singh wrote to the Law Minister today.

He told TNS that the Sikhs would launch a stir if their demands were not met.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120405/punjab.htm#5

Dawn – Hindus of upper Sindh: a bruised community carries on

Cyril Almeida

Tuesday, 3 April 2012. In the little town of Reharki in Ghotki district, a sprawling multi-acre complex sits among fields just off the main road.

Known as the Reharki Darbar, it houses the Sant Satram Das temple and is just a few kilometres from the Bharchundi Sharif shrine, which has become the focal point of allegations that Hindu women are being forced to convert to Islam.

At one end of the Reharki Darbar, an enormous hostel is being constructed for visiting pilgrims, while a recently completed causeway donated by the federal government provides easy access to temple sites at either end of the massive grounds.

In mid-April, according to caretakers at the darbar, tens of thousands of visitors will gather at the complex for a festival marking the death anniversary of Bhagat Kanwar Ram, a popular Sufi poet and singer who was killed in communal riots in 1939, allegedly by the then-custodians of the Bharchundi Sharif shrine.

“It’s a great event and people come from all over, even outside Pakistan, from Dubai and India,” said Aneel Batra, a local community leader.

The large Bharchundi Sharif shrine in Daharki, the source of much consternation among the Hindu community in recent days, and the even-larger Sant Satram Das temple complex in adjacent Reharki symbolise the contradictions of the lives of Hindus in upper Sindh.

In the districts of Jacobabad, Shikarpur, Ghotki, Sukkur, Khairpur and Larkana, a mixture of lower-caste peasants and well-to-do businessmen, traders and professionals do suffer sporadic violence and must contend with a strain of intolerance evident since the Zia era.

However, the Hindu communities’ ancient ties to the land, their integration into Sindhi society and their wealth allows them to work and live in northern Sindh relatively free from the systematic repression that Christians in south Punjab or Ahmadis across Pakistan suffer.

Discrimination against and outright repression of Hindus is far more pronounced in south-east Sindh, where the vast majority of Hindus in the province, many of them lower-caste peasants, live in Tharparkar, Mirpurkhas, Umerkot and Sanghar.

Growing violence

The violence that the Hindus of upper Sindh have faced in recent times does have community leaders feeling vulnerable and scared.

“We feel like there is a plan to get us out of here. That because we are well-to-do, there is envy and people want us gone,” according to Dr Hari Lal, a community leader whose home was targeted in violence in Pano Aqil, Sukkur, last year.

That fear was echoed by Eshwar Lal, president of the Sukkur Hindu Panchayat: “Periodically kidnapping Hindus, entering our homes, picking up our children, it’s all meant to prevent the community from growing, to keep us under psychological pressure.”

In addition to commonplace extortion and somewhat less frequent kidnappings, Hindus have also been attacked and killed in low-level communal violence in upper Sindh lately.

In November 2011, for example, three Hindu doctors were killed in Chak, Shikarpur, after a dispute involving a Muslim girl belonging to the local Bhayo community snowballed. Two months earlier, in Pano Aqil, the hometown of Dr Hari Lal, police had to be called in to quell small-scale riots after the local Kalhora community accused a Hindu employee at a school run by Dr Lal of having molested a female student from Kalhora community.

According to Shakir Jamali, head of the Sukkur Taskforce of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, the violence against Hindus is rooted in local factors and not necessarily linked to religious extremism:  “In the Pano Aqil case, the JUI tried to give it a religious hue via the Kalhora community but it didn’t work. In Shikarpur, too, the killers tried to give the matter a religious dimension but the local civil society prevented that.”

Jamali added: “Because Hindus are weak and vulnerable as a community, justice is often not served. Local politicians, waderas and sardars urge them to hush up the matter, telling them they are too weak to take on Muslim tribes and biradaris.”

A weakened community

Across upper Sindh, Hindus point to the Zia era as the time when the modern-day marginalisation of the ancient Hindu community began.

Mahesh Kumar, the owner of a cotton-ginning factory in Ghotki district, explained: “Before Zia, we had as many votes as the other communities and the local MPA needed our support to win. Zia’s separate electorate marginalised us. Although joint electorates have been reintroduced, those 12-15 years put us under pressure. And once you’re put under pressure, it`s hard to recover.”

With their political influence somewhat eroded , “though still significant via alliances with local politicians, local analysts suggest,” the Hindu population’s sizeable wealth in upper Sindh makes them choice targets of kidnappers, extortionists and petty criminals.

“In Ghotki, the cotton ginning factories are owned by Hindus. In Sukkur, half the trade in rice, grains and dates is conducted by Hindus. In Khairpur, Hindus have a big role in the date trade. In Jacobabad and Kashmore, rice milling and trading are Hindu domains. In Larkana, Hindus have a big role in the rice trade. All of this makes them a target,” said Eshwar Lal.

Hindus are also prominent among the professional classes. A doctor in Sukkur city, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he is a government employee, said: “25 per cent of the doctors in the medical college here are Hindu. We educate our children and they compete for the best jobs. Some in the Muslim community, especially the poorer ones, look at us with envy. And sometimes they act on it and get away with it because of the religious card.”

Leaving not an option

While Hindu victims of violence and other crimes do sometimes migrate to India and other countries, emigration is no more than a trickle. The difficulty in obtaining an India visa is part of the problem but an uncertain future in a new country and the tug of home tend to dampen enthusiasm for migration.

“I have 200 to 250 patients here. If I moved to even Mirpur Mathelo, a few kilometres away, I wouldn’t have a practice,” according to Dr Shivak Ram, speaking at his large family compound in Daharki.

“If I sell off my businesses and move to India, with the currency exchange rate being what it is, I`ll only have half as much money to invest there. Who can suffer that kind of loss?” asked Mahesh Kumar, the affluent factory owner in Ghotki.In Sukkur city, a lawyer, Mukesh Kumar, suggested that if visas to India were easier to come by “a hundred families would leave every week”. But Kumar admitted that he had no intention of relocating his family, “Leaving your place of birth is difficult.

Our roots, our temples, our spiritual links are all with this land. In India, we’ll always be called mohajirs.”

The long history of inclusion in the social, political, economic and even religious fabric of upper Sindh appears to have prevented a rush for the exit by Hindus.

Hindu acceptance of Sufism, as evident in the Bhagat Kanwar Ram festival in Reharki Darbar, and embracing of Sindhi nationalism has allowed the community to brand itself as Sindhi first and made it easier to find common ground with the Muslims of upper Sindh.

“There’s a saying in Sindhi ‘Hindu goth je soonh ahi “a Hindu is the beauty of the village or town,”according to a former resident of Jacobabad who spoke on the condition of anonymity for professional reasons. “Hindus were considered integral to life in Sindh.”

He added: “The situation may have changed somewhat over the last 20 years, but it hasn’t erased the long history of Hindu influence in upper Sindh.”

http://www.dawn.com/2012/04/03/hindus-of-upper-sindh-a-bruised-community-carries-on.html

Published in: on April 5, 2012 at 7:02 am  Comments (1)  
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