UK 25 January till 3 February 2013

2 February 2013
Havelock Road – Picture Drama
The Committee of the Southall Singh Sabha (Ltd) decided to remove a picture of the younger sahibzade (sons of Guru Gobind Singh) and Mata Gujri from their place in the main hall. They claimed that this was in order to get a clear view on the lift. Demonstrators moved into the hall and demanded bringing back of the picture to the position where it was. Informally I was told that there was a fear that this was just a first step, and that the picture of Sant-ji (Jarnail Singh) would be next in line for removal. I do not share this attachment to pictures. Man in Blue

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Havelock Road – The police out in force

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The demonstrators peacefully sitting in the main hall

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The police, including a female Sikh officer, in the Gurdwara office

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The aunties were out in force

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Discussions

Sri Guru Singh Sabha Gurdwara
Havelock Road, Southall, Middlesex UB2 4NP
London, UK

To see more World and UK Gurdwara pictures :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/4304661200/in/set-72157611278213681

More UK pictures to follow
Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

UK 25 January till 3 February 2013

28 January 2013

22.p.ClaphamJctOvereground-28012013

Clapham Junction – Overground
To Highbury and Islington

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Clapham Junction – Overground
Train to Highbury and Islington

29 January 2013
Two Hayes Pictures

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Hayes – From Dawley Road to Hayes Station
On the left tracks for Heathrow Connect and local First Great Western Trains
On the right tracks for First Great Western long distance and Heathrow Express trains

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Hayes – Dawley Road
Here the Buddha has a bar and restaurant !

Havelock Road Picture Drama
2 February 2013

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Southall. Havelock Road Singh Sabha Road Gurdwara
Police guarding the entrance, the next few days I will post more pictures and explain the issue

Sri Guru Singh Sabha Gurdwara
Havelock Road, Southall, Middlesex UB2 4NP
London, UK

To see more London Overground pictures :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157614139538921/

To see more UK general pictures

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157627296796095/

To see more World and UK Gurdwara pictures :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/4304661200/in/set-72157611278213681

More UK pictures to follow
Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

UK 25 January till 3 February 2013

28 January 2013

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West Brompton – South Bound Overground

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Clapham Common- Overground Platforms, South West Trains
To Willesden Junction and Highbury & Islington

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Clapham Common- Overground Platforms, South West Trains
To Willesden Junction and Highbury & Islington

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Clapham Common- Overground Platforms
To Willesden Junction and Highbury & Islington

22.o.ClaphamJctOvereground-28012013

Clapham Common- Overground Platforms
To Willesden Junction and Highbury & Islington

To see more London Overground pictures :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157614139538921/

More UK pictures to follow
Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

UK 25 January till 3 February 2013

28 January 2013

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West Brompton – Northbound District Line

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West Brompton – Northbound Overground

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West Brompton Station – Overground platforms
On the left Empress State Building
Behind the station one of the Earl’s Court exhibition halls

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West Brompton – Southbound
Overground to Clapham Junction
Southern to South Croydon

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West Brompton

To see more UK Trains, Underground and Buses pictures :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157611244941713/

More UK pictures to follow
Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

Kesri Lehar – Article on Devinder Pal Singh Bhuller in the Independent (UK)

Gurfateh Khalsa ji,

The Kesri Lehar Vigil outside 10 Downing Street is nearing its 1st month this weekend.  Thank you all for being so supportive.  This is a long and arduous struggle and we need great patience and resilience.  These have been shown in great abundance to date by all – and believe we are all learning much through this process.  Getting every individual to participate and play an active part is a major hurdle and we are crossing this with great success.

Off course there are many more things to learn on the way – we are establishing closer working relationships among our own people (which is amazing) and non Sikh alike.  MPs still need to be lobbied regularly and we shall work on getting the media to work for us too.

Please do watch the weekly update Kesri Lehar show on Sangat TV every Friday at 8.30pm.

The link below is just indicative of how relationships are forged with people that may have just passed by.

You never know who u r speaking to – this reporter from the Independent – ended up writing about it.  She has agreed to follow up our case and we need many more such reporters.  First stage is just talk to who ever passes you by at the vigil.

The link below is to the article in the Independent.

http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/the-death-sentence-of-devinder-pal-singh-bhullar-must-not-be-carried-out-it-will-divide-india-8607706.html

Please read and show that u “strongly agree” it as it will encourage the reporter and the papers to include more such stories. This is important – the selection bar appears at the foot of the article.

Do also leave comments about why Bhullar should not be hanged. Read what others who disagree with have to say – engage in a national debating platform to get our message across.

Please also forward this to your groups.

Remain in Chardi Kalla,

sevadar @ kesri lehar
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

The Independent – The death sentence of Devinder Pal Singh Bhullar must not be carried out. It will divide India

After a conviction based solely on shaky evidence, Bhullar’s appeal for clemency was rejected by the Indian government on earlier this year and time is running out

Hope Whitmore

Crowds attending the funeral of Margaret Thatcher on April 17th may have noted a smaller, more muted protest as they passed Downing Street, one which had nothing to do with the former prime minister but rather looked to quietly continue to raise awareness of their own cause.  The Protest, run by Kesri Lehar, the Wave for Justice is known as the ‘save a life vigil.’ The life it seeks to save is that of Devinder Pal Singh Bhullar, a prisoner on death row in India.

Professor Bhullar was convicted of involvement in the bombing of the All Indian Youth Congress in New Delhi in 1993, killing 9 and leaving 36 wounded. In 2001 he was sentenced to death, yet the evidence on which his conviction stands is agreed by many to be tenuous, with even the Public Prosecutor who appeared against Bhullar during his Supreme Court appeal of 2002 describing the sentence as a ‘Judicial Error’ due to the conviction being based solely on an uncorroborated confession from Bhullar, later retracted. His appeal for clemency was rejected by the Indian government on April 12th of this year.

I became aware of Bhullar nine days later, when leaving my flat in Leith I heard music and saw in the distance a parade slowly but sparklingly moving along the street. There were so many people, many of whom were Sikh, some were not, and as they moved along they invited onlookers to join them in their celebrations of the Indian New Year. In their midst drove a float decorated with paper lotus blossoms which carried the older people and those in wheelchairs. As I watched a man came and gave me a leaflet by Kesri Lehar, detailing the case of Devinder Pal Singh Bhullar.

The death penalty is anathema to me on principle, however what made this case particularly despicable (and perhaps what made me stop and ask more questions) is not only  the shaky evidence used to convict Bhullar, but his ailing mental health. I read the leaflet then walked into the march, joining three women who I asked about Professor Bhullar. ‘This is not an execution,’ said one of the women ‘if the government kill him it will be an assassination. If this happens there will be a lot of anger in India.’

This is also the opinion of Parmjeet Singh ,  a representative of Kesri Lehar – “Bhullar is a victim of state brutality’ he tells me ‘this [sentence] upholds the barbaric and draconian laws of the state.” He elaborated on the TADA law under which Bhullar was convicted. The Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act is no longer in force, yet during the years it was (1985 – 1995) it was condemned by human rights organisations  for the powers it gave the state to detain prisoners for up to a year and to assume guilt unless the party proved themselves to be innocent.

In the Punjab, where there is a Sikh majority this act was implemented in ways which would leave scars on the region for years to come. A paper by Human Rights Watch entitled Punjab in Crisis lists some of the violations on human rights.  The cases are harrowing in their brutality but I think it is important to read if you wish to understand the impact of TADA. In the context of the act it is possible to see how Bhullar’s execution could be interpreted as an assassination, as well as a continuation or even a vindication of the TADA laws which threw the Punjab into crisis in the aftermath of the assassination of Indira Gandhi and the massacre of November 1984.

Parvinder Singh says “this is a test case of the TADA laws, and this is why the Tamils, Kashmiris and Punjabis [all persecuted under the law] stand together. They know that if the government hangs Professor Bhullar this will pave the way for other prisoners committed under TADA to be sent to the gallows.” He points out that the Tamils, 2000 miles south of the Punjab, held a strike for Bhullar where they kept their children off school.

A further aggravating factor in Bhullar’s case is the fact that he was deported from Germany in 1995, a decision later ruled illegal, which has caused Germany among other European countries to call for clemency for Bhullar. “India cannot afford to ignore the calls from abroad for much longer,” says Parvinder.

‘The youth in Punjab will protest’ he adds ‘that is the natural reaction where there is state injustice. The military and security forces will go to Punjab. The government are preparing for a reaction.’

It is reported that during the massacre of the Sikhs in November 1984 those carrying out the killings were calling ‘Khoon Ka Badla Khoon’ which means ‘blood for blood.’ This cry for retribution is self-perpetuating, part of a long cycle of which Bhullar’s execution would be yet another example. If he is executed it will be seen by the Punjabis as a personal attack on their liberty and position within India.

‘India could live in peace’ says Parvinder Singh ‘they have squandered the great opportunity given by their ethnically diverse makeup. This [execution] would undermine confidence in the government.’

It’s impossible to predict the full scale of the reaction to Bhullar’s execution, but it seems that if the government were to kill him it would be taking a step away from peace and united India. The Khalistan movement could be given more credibility, not less as gaps would open up between the Indian government and the minorities within the country.

Devinder Pal Singh Bhullar’s final mercy plea is currently under consideration. I hope that the Indian president takes into account that clemency would not only be kinder but would be more conducive to an India which is seen to protect its minorities and celebrate its diverse ethnic makeup.

http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/the-death-sentence-of-devinder-pal-singh-bhullar-must-not-be-carried-out-it-will-divide-india-8607706.html

UK 25 January till 3 February 2013

27 January 2013

22.a.Harrow-on-the-HillStation-27012013

Harrow-on-the-Hill – Metropolitan Line
New rolling stock

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Watford Station – Metropolitan Line
Aldgate and Bakerstreet trains

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Watford Station – Metropolitan Line
Bakerstreet train

22.d.Watford.BakerStrAllStations-27012013

Watford to Bakerstreet, all stations

28 January 2013

22.e.WestBromptonDistrict-28012013

West Brompton – District Line

To see more UK Trains, Underground and Buses pictures :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157611244941713/

More UK pictures to follow
Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

UK 25 January till 3 February 2013

26 January 2013

21.v.WhiteCity.607-26012013

White City Bus Station

21.w.WhiteCity.607-26012013

White City Bus Station
207 to Southall – 260 to Cricklewood – 607 to Uxbridge
I took the 607 to get back to Hayes

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Soutall Station – Ji áiá nun
Bus 607 to Ealing Broadway, change to First Great Western train

27 January 2013

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Harrow-on-the-Hill – Metropolitan line

21.z.Harrow-on-the-HillStation-27012013

Harrow-on-the-Hill – Metropolitan line
New rolling stock

To see more UK Trains, Underground and Buses pictures :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157611244941713/

More UK pictures to follow
Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

UK 25 January till 3 February 2013

26 January 2013

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Royal Oak – Crossrail tunnel entrance works
From Royal Oak I walked to Queensway Central Line station and took a westbound train from there

21.r.WhiteCity-26012013

White City – Central Line station

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White City – Central Line station

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Wood Lane – Central and Hammersmith & City Line station

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Wood Lane – Central and Hammersmith & City Line station

To see more UK Trains, Underground and Buses pictures :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157611244941713/

More UK pictures to follow
Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

UK 25 January till 3 February 2013

26/01/2013

21.l.HounslowEast-26012013

Hounslow East – eastbound Piccadilly Line train

21.m.H&CandCircle-26012013

Hammersmith – Hammersmith & City and Circle Line trains

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Royal Oak – Circle Line train

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Royal Oak

21.p.RoyalOakCrossrail-26012013

Royal Oak, Crossrail

To see more UK Trains, Underground and Buses pictures :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157611244941713/

More UK pictures to follow
Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

UK 25 January till 3 February 2013

26 January 2013

21.g.CranfordCountryPark-26012013

Cranford Park

21.h.CranfordCountryPark-26012013
River Crane

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River Crane

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Hounslow East – Piccadilly Line – Eastbound platform

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Hounslow East – Piccadilly Line
Tracks to.from Hounslow Central

To see more UK Trains, Underground and Buses pictures :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157611244941713/

To see more UK general pictures

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157627296796095/

More UK pictures to follow
Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

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