The Asian Age – Indian, Chinese troops came face-to-face in Sikkim’s Naku La last week: Reports

New Delhi – India, 25 January 2021. Chinese troops attempted to transgress into the Indian side of the LAC but were stopped by the Indian military personnel, sources said.

Indian and Chinese troops came face-to-face at Naku La in North Sikkim last week amid the tense border standoff between the two sides in eastern Ladakh, people familiar with the development said on Monday.

They said the Chinese troops attempted to transgress into the Indian side of the Line of Actual Control (LAC) but were stopped by the Indian military personnel.

It is learnt that a brawl broke out when the Indian troops stopped the Chinese soldiers. However, there was no official word on the incident yet.

Naku La was the same site where the Indian and Chinese troops had engaged in a fierce face-off on 09 May last year following a violent clash between the two sides in Pangong lake area in eastern Ladakh that has triggered the nearly nine-month-long military standoff.

The Indian and Chinese armies on Sunday held another round of Corps Commander-level talks with an aim to move forward on disengagement of troops from all the friction points in eastern Ladakh.

https://www.asianage.com/india/all-india/250121/indian-chinese-troops-came-face-to-face-in-sikkims-naku-la-last-week-reports.html

The Tribune – Guru Nanak’s Bein(g)

Jalandhar – Panjab – India, 29 January 2021.

The first Sikh master was blessed by the infinite here. As time aged, Kali Bein became a victim of modernisation until Balbir Singh Seechewal, an environmentalist, intervened.

Tribune correspondent Aparna Banerji and lensman Malkiat Singh sail through the surroundings to present a clear picture of present-day Bein.

On a mellow chilly wintry day the tree-laden banks of the Kali Bein, in the midst of the pandemic, are exceptionally calm and tranquil.

Laughter from a lone bunch of tourists and an occasional whirl of a bike engine are the only sounds making inroads into silence and interrupting sweet crooning of the birds.

The Bein flows gleefully – its characteristic dark waters canopied by the shadows of the sky-embracing trees swaying on the banks look like an abstract painting, limned by nature’s lily hands.

The holy town of Sultanpur Lodhi could have lost it all almost 21 years ago.

Thanks to the efforts undertaken by Sant Balbir Singh Seechewal who spearheaded the Kar Sewa movement that led to the cleaning up of the stream’s bed and himself waded shoulder-deep to uproot weeds, muck from the water hyacinth-ridden Bein.

Eventually, water released from the Mukerian Hydel Project got the river running through the town. However, today there are some fresh threats such as modernisation, development and tourism on the horizon for the recently-revived Bein.

The geography

Originating from the natural springs at the Dhanoa village, the Kali Bein flows for 165 km ending at the confluence of the Beas and Sutlej rivers at the Harike Pattan.

A historical well at its originating point has been neglected long due to a dispute over its ownership. Its deep springs and overflowing waters are now reduced to several feet of murky waters.

However, the Bein has been kept alive by the Mukerian Hydel Channel. It is also the key source of water to the Kanjli Wetlands, a Ramsar site.

Guru Nanak Dev’s first love

Guru Nanak Dev’s loved the rivulet for this is where he drank life’s nectar and attained enlightenment. It’s believed that he took a dip into the Kali Bein and emerged out three days later, enlightened.

While the first Sikh Guru disappeared one morning near the beri at the site of the present-day Ber Sahib gurdwara, the spot where he stepped out, is now marked by the Sant Ghat gurdwara, built to commemorate the historic event.

The mool mantar was also recited at the same site. This spot is now getting another addition – the Mool Mantar Sthan, a huge circular building which shall house a multimedia museum and a museum of Guru Nanak Dev.

Doomsday nearing?

The rampant colonisation of its previously untouched and pristine banks is stoking concerns. The kar sewa and subsequent Seechewal model of groundwater revival attracted a string of stalwarts such as former President APJ Abdul Kalam, Bihar CM Nitish Kumar, Madhya Pradesh CM Shivraj Singh Chauhan and so on.

https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/punjab/guru-nanaks-being-204997

The Caravan – The New Khalistan Conspiracy

The government is playing the same game that once led Punjab to disaster

Hartosh Singh Bal

27 January 2021, There is a familiar pattern to the right wing’s spin on the events of 26 January: condemning the farmers who reached the centre of Delhi, labeling them “extremists,” “Khalistani,” or simply “anti-national.”

Perhaps it suits everyone to now find a scapegoat in people like the actor Deep Sidhu, who is accused of instigating protesters to hoist a flag at the Red Fort, and the supposed extremist elements who farmer leaders claimed had hijacked part of the protests.

But what happened was predictable. The government and the farmer-union leaders would surely have seen this coming, and yet, they did little to forestall it.

The protests against the farm laws have been building up since September, when the laws were passed, for the first month and a half in Punjab and then, since late November, on the outskirts of Delhi. Over this protracted period, the negotiations went nowhere and the cadre became steadily impatient.

Partly to appease the cadre, the farmer leaders themselves had built up expectations of a historic tractor match on Republic Day, circling the power centre in Delhi. The leaders and the Delhi Police failed to agree on a route for days.

Barely two days before the march, they finally settled on a route that limited the march to Delhi’s outskirts. To no one’s surprise, the decision fell well short of the cadre’s expectations, which the union leaders themselves had fanned.

From the night of 24 January, the disquiet among the younger elements in the protest began to be openly articulated.

On the afternoon of 25 January, Sarwan Singh Pandher, the general secretary of Kisan Mazdoor Sangharsh Committee, a major union at the protests, announced that their cadre would not follow the designated route.

After Pandher’s speech, it was a given that a large number of the protestors would deviate from the route. Given a 15-hour notice of this likelihood, the Delhi Police seemed surprisingly unprepared for it.

The events of 26 January made clear that while the farmer leadership expressed the sentiments of the protesters, it does not control them. This was already evident to anyone following the protests closely.

For instance, even the current location of the protests on the outskirts of Delhi is fortuitous, resulting from the youth cadre’s spontaneous decisions.

When the unions began to move the protests out from Punjab, the leaders did not have a clear cut plan for reaching Delhi.

Upon encountering police barricades on the border between Punjab and Haryana, at places such as Shambu village, many of the protestors took matters in their own hands and breached the blockade.

The longer the protests go on without a resolution that is acceptable, the greater the possibility of a further loss of control.

In such situations, any assertion by a great mass of the farmer protestors will find articulation through the ethos of Sikhism. This was again evident from the nature of the protests.

While the leadership is drawn from the Left, the cadre is largely Sikh, and regularly articulated issues through the lens of its identity. The imagery of Baghel Singh, an eighteenth century Sikh general, was pasted on every other trolley headed from Punjab to join the protests for Republic Day.

Baghel Singh had laid siege to the Delhi of Shah Alam II, the Mughal emperor, and won. He imposed taxes on goods imported into the city, using the funds to build most of the major Sikh gurdwaras of the city.

This imagery of Delhi under siege explains some of what happened at the Red Fort but it is important to note it was not directed against the residents of Delhi. The contrast between the reality of what happened and the perception that is being created is stark.

Lakhs of farmers moved through Delhi. There was no assault on private property, nor on civilians. The damage to the DTC bus took place because the police deliberately placed it in the path of the protestors. Beyond these facts are only the events at the Red Fort.

Some protesters raised a flag and attacked the police. But even in the aggressive stupidity of those at the monument, care was taken to ensure the supremacy of the tiranga, the Indian flag, was not dwarfed by the Nishan Sahib, the Sikh flag, hoisted below it.

In less than a day, enough has already been written about the Nishan Sahib to substantiate that it is no icon of Khalistan, leave alone of terror.

It is absurd to see the greater visibility of Sikh iconography in a protest dominated by Sikhs as a deviation from the ethos of the country when the cult of the Hindu rashtra is upon us.

From a bhumipujan, or foundation-laying puja, for the new building of Parliament, to the prime minister in attendance at a puja to mark the construction of the Ram temple at the site of the Babri Masjid in Ayodhya, we are awash in Hindu imagery.

When those who openly espouse Hindutva as a guiding philosophy find problems with imagery from other religions, the majoritarianism that defines the current government only becomes starker.

Supposedly liberal commentators who join this echo heighten the perception that secularism is an idea in India that only minorities have to espouse, that the profession of sarv dharma sambhav, equality among religions, in practice only means that some religions are more equal than others.

But while the rest of the country can claim ignorance of the iconography of the agitation, this certainly does not apply to those in the national security apparatus, such as National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, who have dealt with Punjab since the 1980s.

Given this, it is difficult to gauge why the security at the Red Fort was found hugely wanting on a day where its symbolic value was evident, and when there was ample warning that the route the breakaway faction was to take could easily lead to the monument.

In fact, a day before the rally, the media put out stories quoting Delhi Police sources, who said that “Pakistan-based ISI (Inter-Services Intelligence) and ‘rogue elements linked to Khalistani outfits’ are likely to hijack and disrupt the tractor rally.”

The sources stressed that “a huge conspiracy has been hatched.” Are we then to believe the Delhi Police and the Indian security apparatus knew of this conspiracy and let it happen?

After the events of Republic Day, the actor Deep Sidhu has been much in focus, and he did have a part to play in the events.

All we know for sure, however, is that his entry into politics was mediated through his proximity to Sunny Deol, a BJP member of parliament, but hardly an ideologue.

Since then, Sidhu has publicly regurgitated a largely incoherent mix of readings, from Martin Luther King to Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale, the head of the Damdami Taksal, an orthodox Sikh group.

But that he finds an echo among many of the young protestors is because the farm leaders have been unable to rein in this cadre’s impatience.

On the back of figures such as Sidhu, the government has sought to revive the bogey of Khalistan.

An organisation such as Sikhs For Justice, which enjoys hardly any support in Punjab, as documented in a recent piece in The Caravan, has been designated a terrorist organisation.

While SFJ has a clear separatist agenda, it has had no terror links, but has suddenly acquired a prominence that has little to do with its impact.

Meanwhile, the National Investigation Agency has sent out notices over the protests not just to Deep Sidhu, but to figures such as Jasbir Singh Rode, a nephew of Bhindranwale.

This makes good grist for the right-wing mill, but a recent column in The Tribune on Operation Black Thunder, the siege of the Golden Temple in the late 1980s, highlighted the current establishment’s familiarity with the very extremists it is now condemning.

Quoting Open Secrets – a 2005 book by M K Dhar, a former joint director of the Intelligence Bureau, the column noted that barely two months before the operation, “the IB had quietly begun supplying AK-47s to the then Akal Takht Jathedar Jasbir Singh Rode, who incidentally is Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale’s nephew.

Rode, an IB operative who was anointed jathedar of the supreme Sikh temporal seat, was tasked to create a Trojan Horse comprising a 15-member squad to neutralise the terrorist gangs inside the temple.”

Dhar was involved in the IB’s operations in Punjab. NSA Doval was then the agency’s joint director, and has since been credited with an intimate involvement in the operation. At the very least, it is fair to say that Rode and Doval are well acquainted.

This is an old and dangerous game that has been played before by a central government and has most recently been well documented by GBS Sidhu, the former special secretary of the Research & Analysis Wing of the Indian intelligence services, in his book, The Khalistan Conspiracy.

Sidhu provides first-hand material on the Indira Gandhi government’s machinations in the early 1980s.

He reveals how, even though there were ample opportunities to arrive at a settlement with a moderate Akali leadership before Bhindranwale became the dominant figure in the increasingly violent movement, on several occasions, the government went back on agreed commitments at the very last moment.

The book has been heavily promoted by right-wing commentators seeking to target the then Congress administration. But these very same figures are now setting the country along a similar path by labeling the protests the work of Khalistanis.

In hindsight, the demands of the Akalis in the early 1980s, which related to issues such as river waters, to Chandigarh, to the live telecast of the kirtan at the Golden Temple, do not seem to be of a nature that should fuel the decade of militancy that did so much damage to Punjab and the rest of the country.

Through such figures as Doval, this government shares a continuity of thinking with the kind of machinations that had led Punjab to disaster in the first place.

It should not be the case that, looking back two decades from now, we are counting the cost of a government’s egoistic stand over laws which have much that is wrong with them, a fact that the establishment has already tacitly conceded, while offering amendments and a freeze on implementation in negotiations with the protesters.

https://caravanmagazine.in/politics/republic-day-khalistan-conspiracy-government-playing-dangerous-game-punjab-disaster

Dawn – Sheikh’s acquittal

Op/Ed, 30 January 2021. The Supreme Court’s decision to order the release of Omar Saeed Sheikh, the principal accused in the Daniel Pearl murder case, has come as a blow to not just the family of the slain journalist but also to proponents of free press everywhere.

By a majority of two to one, the apex court extended the benefit of the doubt to the accused, thereby removing a key hurdle in his release.

Although a review petition has been filed, at the moment, there is little preventing Sheikh, arguably one of the most dangerous militants, from being a free man.

Given the ghastly nature of the crime he has been accused of, and the long and painful fight of the Pearl family for justice, it is no surprise that both his family and the new US Secretary of State Antony Blinken have condemned the decision in strong words.

Dubbing Sheikh’s release an “affront to terrorism victims everywhere”, Blinken has urged a review with the hope that justice will be done.

The fact that Sheikh, a notorious man who is allegedly involved in some high-profile crimes that transcend borders, will soon be free is yet another startling chapter in his cryptic life story.

The British-born militant who dropped out of the prestigious London School of Economics and disappeared into the Balkans, only to resurface later in India where he was arrested then freed in a hostage exchange, has been all too lucky in his trysts with danger.

He is believed to have been a part of the conspiracy to assassinate General Musharraf, and apparently was also the person who called then president Asif Zardari, impersonating the Indian external affairs minister from inside his prison cell.

He is accused of kidnapping four foreign tourists in India-held Kashmir as well as transferring money to a militant involved in the 9/11 attacks. The fact that this man has always been a step ahead of the authorities is mind-boggling.

Perhaps the world will never learn what his true role was in Daniel Pearl’s kidnapping and murder. But despite that, there are enough signs that he is a dangerous man who should remain behind bars.

The entire case points to the sorry state of Pakistan’s law-enforcement agencies that have failed to produce convincing evidence that holds in a court of law.

The fact that an individual accused of endless criminal acts has time and again hoodwinked the authorities is an indictment of the investigating agencies in the country.

Not only should the state seriously reflect on this failure, it must also tell the world who the real murderers of Daniel Pearl are if Sheikh and three others have been acquitted.

If it fails to do so, it will send a message that there is no justice for those who harm journalists in Pakistan, and that their killers continue to roam free.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1604445/sheikhs-acquittal

The Hindustan Times – Op/Ed – As LAC becomes the new LoC, India’s challenge deepens

C Uday Bhaskar

Op/Ed, 30 January 2021. The severe constraints imposed by the pandemic will be unveiled soon, when the budget is presented. Delhi‘s challenge will be to provide adequate funds for deployment of troops along the LAC for an extended period.

Long-term planning must go beyond urgent procurement of some inventory items and focus on enhancing India’s neglected trans-border military capabilities in an astute manner.

The New Year has got off to a bumpy start as far as the already tense and uneasy India-China relationship is concerned.

Even as troops from both sides are in proximate and prickly contact in the Ladakh region since the middle of 2020, January 2021 has been punctuated by a series of developments that pose a complex set of challenges to the two Asian giants.

The ninth round of talks between the military commanders from both sides, held on January 24, has remained inconclusive. But the silver lining is that even if there was no breakthrough, there has been no breakdown as regards the dialogue process.

This is even more relevant given that there were reports of skirmishes in the Sikkim region on January 20.

Earlier in the month, media reports referred to the Chinese having constructed a new village a few kilometres across the Line of Actual Control (LAC) over the last year, thereby altering the demographic patterns in transgression of protocols agreed to in 2005.

To aggravate the territoriality issue further, China asserted, on 21 January, that its construction of a village near LAC in the eastern sector was “beyond reproach” because Beijing had “never recognised” Arunachal Pradesh.

In summary, the contested territoriality issue is now no longer confined to Ladakh in the western sector, but has moved eastwards with areas in Sikkim and Arunachal Pradesh being brought into simmer mode.

Reviewing the troubled bilateral relationship in a holistic manner, one could argue that India’s approach since Galwan seeks to convey a message of political resolve, that the Narendra Modi government will not be the first to blink, with a visible signal that restraint is still at play.

The fact that the Indian military could wrest a minor but significant tactical advantage in the Ladakh region after being initially “surprised” has given Delhi that additional leverage, which has enhanced its resolve to stay firm and seek a return to the pre-Galwan status quo position.

Two signals from Delhi merit scrutiny. The Republic Day gallantry awards included a Mahavir Chakra (the second-highest award) to Colonel Santosh Babu, the commanding officer of the Bihar regiment who, along with 20 other soldiers, was killed by People’s Liberation Army (PLA) troops in the Galwan scuffle.

The citation for Babu notes that “his column faced stiff resistance from the adversary who attacked using lethal and sharp weapons along with heavy stone pelting from adjoining heights” and avoids any reference to China or PLA by name.

In other places, the choice of word is ”enemy”. One can conjecture that this is a case of Delhi signalling an olive branch in an elliptical manner.

Lest the Modi government be accused of appeasement in not naming the adversary/enemy, external affairs minister (EAM) S Jaishankar’s remarks, on 28 January, at a think-tank event, are instructive.

Reviewing the entire trajectory of the India-China ties from Delhi’s perspective, EAM reiterated what he has said in the past, namely that Galwan has profoundly disturbed the relationship and that in relation to LAC “any attempt to unilaterally change the status quo is completely unacceptable”.

He added, “Significantly, to date, we have yet to receive a credible explanation for the change in China’s stance or reasons for massing of troops in the border areas.”

China, which chose to tie a “knot” in a relationship that was relatively stable since 1993, has to decide on how it wants to frame the relationship with India, but for now, the tactical scenario is bleak.

With LAC now becoming troubled in both west and east, from Ladakh to Arunachal Pradesh (the tri-junction with Bhutan having already been aggravated), the focus for the Indian military in monitoring PLA and deterring where required will be the higher priority.

In short, LAC will acquire the sheen of the Line of Control (LoC) with Pakistan. And this will dilute the reserve strength and assets that India has maintained till now, when the annual operational tasking prioritised the western neighbour.

The severe constraints imposed by the pandemic will be unveiled soon, when the Union Budget is presented. Delhi’s challenge will be to provide adequate funds for the deployment of troops along LAC for an extended period.

Long-term planning must go beyond urgent procurement of some inventory items and focus on enhancing India’s neglected trans-border military capabilities in an astute manner.

Apart from air and naval power, India needs to invest in the new domain of new technologies that extend from cyberwarfare to artificial intelligence and spectrum domination in a selective manner. This plea has been made often but in vain.

Jaishankar’s speech is an important diplomatic punctuation in placing markers and identifying the preferred template for the bilateral relationship as being predicated on “the three mutuals, mutual respect, mutual sensitivity and mutual interests”.

The resonance with the Nehruvian era (Panchsheel) is palpable. And the abiding lesson is that diplomacy and political resolve, however refined, acquire appropriate efficacy only when backed by credible composite national capability, both economic and military.

The Covid-19-scarred budget will play a role in framing India’s long-term China policy.

Commodore (retired) C Uday Bhaskar is the director of Society for Policy Studies The views expressed are personal

https://www.hindustantimes.com/opinion/as-lac-becomes-the-new-loc-india-s-challenge-deepens-101611931699672.html

Sikh24.com – ‘200 Punjab protesters detained, many booked under UAPA – Sedition sections in Delhi’

Sikh24 Editors

New Delhi – India, 30 January 2021. Raising deep concern over the disappearances of hundreds of the agitating farmers in Delhi, representatives of six human rights advocacy groups jointly said, “As many as 200 protesters have been detained, while many have been booked under Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA) and Sedition sections in Delhi following the incidents took place at Red Fort on 26 January”.

A press conference was organized by these groups, Khalra Mission Organization, Punjab Documentation and Advocacy Project, Punjab Human Rights Organisation, Lawyers for Human Rights International, People’s Union for Civil Liberties and Human Rights Law Network.

Accompanied by the representatives of other groups, Khalra Mission Organization patron Bibi Parmjit Kaur Khalra addressed the press conference seeking the intervention of Supreme Court into the human rights violations being done by the Indian security forces.

They also showed the list of FIRs registered by Delhi Police against the protesters.

“We write with collective concern as to farmers protest in Delhi which took place on the 26th of January 202, Republic Day.

An estimated 200,000 protestors took part in a largely peaceful tractor rally that led to at least one death and resulted in the detention of 200 protesters, footage posted on social media showing people fleeing from police indiscriminately firing teargas at them and the detention and beating of protestors assembled at the Red Fort.

There have been reports of protesters injured by the firing of live rounds. There has been at least one fatality of a farmer Navdeep Singh Hundal, a 26-year-old farmer from Uttarakhand at ITO in Delhi”, they said.

The statement issued on occasion reads, “Despite the Supreme Court of India having directed the Delhi police to decide to allow the protest on the 26th of January, there was an abject failure to properly police this protest which has led to these events, and the use of force was entirely disproportionate.

At other protest sites there is footage of officers seen beating protesters with batons and attacking tractors and other protest vehicles with lathis”.

“Despite a sustained attempt to demonise the peaceful protests over months, from certain sections of the Indian media, the farmers have shown maturity, dignity and leadership.

As with any large scale protests, there were sporadic incidents of violence, however these did not mar what was otherwise an overwhelmingly peaceful and successful protest.

By contrast, there have been no violent incidents on the Singhu, Tikri or Ghazipur borders where the protesting farmers have been camping peacefully against the three new farm bills, for the last three months.

The organisers of the protest have been congratulated from all quarters as to the success in which these organised protest of mass rallies have been conducted”, it reads.

It further states, “We remind the Indian authorities of the United Nations Basic Principles on the Use of Force and Firearms, which prohibits the use of firearms and ammunition by law enforcement that causes unwarranted injury or presents an unwarranted risk.

The international covenant on civil and political rights states that firearms are not an appropriate tool for the policing of assemblies and must never be used to disperse an assembly”.

“In the 1980’s and 1990’s Panjab and Delhi has witnessed much bloodshed cycles of violence and counter-violence in which genocidal pogroms, enforced disappearances extrajudicial killings took place on a wide scale and have still not been resolved, for which thousands of victims still await justice.

This year also marks the 35th anniversary of the notorious Saka Nakodar shooting in which 5 innocent protestors were gunned down in Nakodar, Jalandhar for which their families are still awaiting justice.

No right-thinking person would wish to see any escalation of violence, retribution or a return to those dark days”, it reads further.

The human rights activists said, “The Police and State Security Services are now indiscriminately detaining people, slapping charges under UAPA, terrorism, sedition and anti-national conduct on hundreds of people associated with the farmers protest, including the Farmer leadership.

The actions of protestors are neither ‘terrorist’- seditious nor anti-national. They simply disagree with a Government policy”.

“The Government is now exercising extraordinary powers to deploy heavy security and disperse farmers protest and deny them the rights to freely protest, which is of considerable concern as the protesters are camped at various protest sites on Delhi’s borders”, they said.

They said, “We ask for the release of detained protesters, with reports emerging of their ill-treatment and torture in custody.

An immediate CBI led investigation to establish the cause of the death and to investigate claims that he was killed as a result of police firing or whether it was accidental as has been claimed by Delhi police.

The Supreme Court should preserve all CCTV of Delhi’s CCTV entry points to unearth the truth of how the violence was allow to happen”.

“Human rights organisations will continue to monitor ongoing developments, human rights violations and urge the Government of India to show restraint and continue to engage with the protesting farmers groups on the issue of the three farming laws.

The shutting down of social media accounts, restricting internet services as well as cutting off electricity and water supply, where a large number of protestors are elderly and vulnerable”, they said.

They added, “The forcible attempts to remove the protesters from the protest sites is illegal, unconstitutional and arbitrary.

The registration of FIRs against the farmer leadership not only complicates a very complex and delicate process in their ongoing dialogue with the Government but is also a severe and draconian attack on their fundamental right to protest as well as their constitutional right to object to these laws”.

India Today – Akal Takht chief slams farmer unions, but says hoisting Sikh flag no crime

The Chief of Akal Takht, highest Sikh temporal authority, Gyani Harpreet Singh has said that the flag hoisted at the Red Fort is Nishan Sahib and comparing the same with the Khalistan flag was not acceptable to the Sikhs.

Manjeet Sehgal

Chandigarh – Panjab – India, 29 January 2021. The Chief of Akal Takht, highest Sikh temporal authority, Gyani Harpreet Singh has said that the flag hoisted at the Red Fort is Nishan Sahib and comparing the same with the Khalistan flag was not acceptable to the Sikhs.

Gyani Harpreet Singh said the hoisting of the religious flag was not a crime and that it was done earlier too.

“A lot of noise is being made about the hoisting of the Nishan Sahib flag on a pole at Red Fort which is baseless.

Putting the Khalsa flags is nothing new. Every year, when the Guruparv is organised in New Delhi, such flags are put on the walls of many buildings including Red Fort,” he said.

“Indian soldiers also hoisted this flag in Galwan valley. These flags were also seen on a tableau of Guru Teg Bahadur which was included in this year’s Republic Day parade,” he said.

Republic day incidents unfortunate : Harpreet Singh

“Some unfortunate incidents took place on 26 January in New Delhi which should not have happened as this has given a setback to the farmers’ protest,” Gyani said.

He slammed the farmer unions for the violence, but also expressed apprehension that those caught by the police were ‘innocent’.

“It was the responsibility of the leaders at the forefront to maintain the sanctity of the protest. Normally, the guilty go scot-free and the innocents are caught,” Gyani said.

He said whether the police beat up the protesters or the farmers took the law in their hands was violence that cannot be justified in any manner.

“The government should take a step back and there is no harm if the farmer unions also do the same. The solution lies in the talks” he said.

Gyani Harpreet Singh had earlier kicked off controversy by saying Khalistan was the dream of every Sikh and that RSS was trying to divide the nation.

https://www.indiatoday.in/india/story/akal-takht-chief-slams-farmer-unions-but-says-hoisting-sikh-flag-no-crime-1764124-2021-01-29

Scroll.in – Delhi Police arrest 44 in Singhu border violence

Tension arose on Friday after a group of around 200 people, claiming to be local residents, barged into the farmers’ protest site despite heavy security.

Scroll Staff

New Delhi – India, 30 January 2021. The Delhi Police on Friday arrested 44 people in connection with the violence at Singhu border, ANI reported. A man who attacked a policeman with a sword was among those arrested.

Tension arose on Friday after a group of around 200 people, claiming to be local residents, barged into the farmers’ protest site despite heavy security. The group indulged in stone pelting and damaged tents pitched by the farmers.

The police reportedly did not try to stop the group at first, but resorted to the use tear gas shells and batons after the situation escalated. Several people, including Delhi Police Station House Office (Alipur) Pradeep Paliwal, were injured in the clashes.

People who barged into the protest site demanded that farmers vacate the area. They alleged that the farmers had “insulted” the national flag during their tractor parade on Republic Day.

The protesting farmers, on the other hand, claimed that the vandals were not local residents but hired goons.

Meanwhile, fact-checking website Alt News identified Bharatiya Janata Party supporters among the mob. One of them was Aman Dabas, who is married to BJP municipal councillor Anju Kumar.

The situation at farmers’ protest sites on Delhi’s borders has been tense after violence at the Republic Day tractor rally. On Thursday, farmers protesting at Ghazipur on the Delhi-Uttar Pradesh border were given an ultimatum to vacate the site by midnight.

As the farmers prepared for eviction, Bharatiya Kisan Union Spokesperson Rakesh Tikait tearfully declared that he would rather die by suicide than end the agitation. His comments drew huge groups of protestors from Uttar Pradesh and Haryana back to the site.

Meanwhile the Opposition criticised the Centre for trying to intimidate the farmers. “Neither by deploying police at Ghazipur, nor by pelting stones at Singhu border will dishearten the farmers,” Congress leader Rahul Gandhi said. “The entire country is supporting them, you cannot intimidate them.”

https://scroll.in/latest/985488/singhu-border-violence-man-who-attacked-policeman-with-sword-among-44-arrested

The News – Supreme Court orders release of prime accused in Daniel Pearl murder

The News – Web Desk, 28 January 2021. Rejecting the appeals filed by the Sindh government, the Supreme Court on Thursday ordered the release of the prime accused in the murder of American journalist Daniel Pearl.

The provincial government had filed a petition against an order of the Sindh High Court (SHC) overturning the conviction of Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh in the 2002 murder of the American journalist in Karachi.

A three-member bench of the SC headed by Justice Mushir Alam announced the verdict with a 2-1 majority.

“The court has come out to say that there is no offence that he has committed in this case,” Mahmood Sheikh, who represented Sheikh, told AFP.

In April 2020, the SHC had overturned the death sentence of Omer Sheikh and sentenced him to seven years in prison and acquitted three others accused, Fahad Naseem, Sheikh Adil and Salman Saqib, who were earlier sentenced to life imprisonment by an anti-terrorism court (ATC).

After the SHC verdict, the Sindh government and Daniel Pearl’s family had filed petitions in the apex court.

During today’s hearing, the Sindh government provided sensitive information on the matter to the court in a sealed envelop.

The Advocate General Sindh stated that Omar Sheikh has links with banned outfits adding that there is evidence which can not be proved in a court of law.

On this, Justice Umar Ata Bandial remarked that the information shared with the court was never presented at any forum.

“How can we review the material which was never brought on record? If the authorities had information about the accused why did they not try him for anti-sate activities?”

The bench added that the government never declared Omar Sheikh an enemy agent. “No one can deny the war against terror but when this battle will end no one knows. May be it will continue for generations to come.”

After hearing the arguments, the court reserved the verdict briefly and announced it shortly after.

https://www.thenews.com.pk/latest/781330-supreme-court-orders-to-release-prime-accused-in-daniel-pearl-murder

Also read :
https://maninblue1947.wordpress.com/2020/05/07/dawn-why-we-are-seeking-justice-for-our-son-daniel-pearl/

The Tribune – Nagar kirtan marks Baba Deep Singh’s birth anniversary

Tribune News Service

Amritsar – Panjab – India, 27 January 2021. On the occasion of the birth anniversary of Shaheed Baba Deep Singh, the Shromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC) on Tuesday decorated and carried out a nagar kirtan (religious procession) from Sri Akal Takht Sahib.

On the occasion, panj pyare (five beloved ones), nishanchi (flagman) Singhs were honoured with siropas (robe of honour) by Giani Jagtar Singh head granthi Sachkhand Sri Harmandar Sahib.

Giani Jagtar Singh also carried and placed Sri Guru Granth Sahib in a golden palanquin.

Representatives of various religious societies were also present in large numbers during the nagar kirtan.

Apart from this, gatka and band parties also participated in large numbers, while dignitaries and sangat set up various langars. The sangat gave hearty welcome to nagar kirtan at Chowk Ghanta Ghar, Jallianwala Bagh, Lakkar Mandi, Sultanwind Gate, Water Tank, Swaran House, Golden Cloth Market, Sultanwind Road, Tej Nagar Chowk, Bazar Shaheed Udham Singh Nagar, Kot Mahna Singh to Tarn Taran Road, and other places.

In nagar kirtan, additional head granthi of Sri Akal Takht Sahib Bhai Malkit Singh, senior vice-president of SGPC Surjit Singh Bhitewad, junior vice-president Baba Buta Singh, general secretary Bhagwant Singh Sialka, chief secretary SGPC Harjinder Singh, interim committee member Navtej Singh Kauni, Amrik Singh Shahpur, member Bhai Rajinder Singh Mehta, Bhai Manjit Singh Bhurakohna, Bhai Ram Singh, Harpal Singh Jallah, secretary Mahinder Singh Ahli, additional secretary Sukhdev Singh Bhurakohna, and other officials were present.

https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/amritsar/nagar-kirtan-marks-baba-deep-singhs-birth-anniversary-204466