Book on Indira Gandhi would play important role in improving Indo-Pak ties: Pak writer

Karachi, May 5 (ANI): Keeping in view the global situation, it was imperative for both India and Pakistan to work together for improving ties, and her book: “Indira Priyadarshini Gandhi” would play its due role in the peace process, Pakistani author Azra Gorakhpuri has said.

Speaking during the launch of the book at the Karachi Press Club, Gorakhpuri said it was important for both India and Pakistan to maintain a cordial relationship with each other for durable peace in the region.

Gorakhpuri recalled that she first met former Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi in Lucknow in 1979, The Daily Times reports.

She said her book, which has been written in Hindi, contains intriguing details of Indira Gandhi’s life. The book has detailed description about India’s first women Prime Minister’s childhood and her growing up days.

Gorakhpuri said she has also included some of Indira’s personal memories about her marriage with Feroze Gandhi and the dispute with her father Pandit Jawahar Lal Nehru that followed her marriage.

Gorakhpuri said she wanted to present the book to both of Indira’s daughter-in-law’s-Sonia Gandhi and Maneka Gandhi, and also expressed the hope that her book, which she said is based on true facts, would play a significant role in improving Indo-Pak ties. (ANI)

Ex-Yugoslav leader Tito’s elephant dies

An elephant given as a present to former Yugoslav leader Josip Broz Tito 40 years ago has died suddenly, a Croatian newspaper reported on Wednesday.

Late Indian prime minister Indira Gandhi gave Sony to the communist leader in 1970 when the bull elephant was a two-year-old calf, the Jutarnji List daily reported.

Sony, who lived at Croatia’s northern national Brijuni islands park where Mr Tito had a private zoo, died on Friday.

An autopsy is to determine the cause of his death. In the wild, elephants can live up to 70 years.

The islands were once reserved for Mr Tito and his close friends but are now frequented by officials and tourists.

Sony lived there among other exotic animals including Lanka, a cow elephant.

“We were all shocked by his death. We simply cannot believe that he is not here any more,” Vesna Klunic of the national park told the media.

“Now we will take special care of Lanka since it’s not easy for her.”

Mr Tito ruled the former Yugoslav federation, of which Croatia was a part, for 35 years until his death in 1980.

A decade after his death, Yugoslavia broke up in a series of internecine wars.

Sonia Gandhi meets freedom fighter”s family at Rae Bareilly

Rae Bareilly (Uttar Pradesh), Mar 31 (ANI): Congress President Sonia Gandhi on Wednesday met veteran freedom fighter Gaya Prasad Shukla”s family on her one-day visit to parliamentary constituency in Rae Bareilly.

After arriving at the Fursatganj airstrip and after a brief halt at ITI, Gandhi drove straight to the Central office of the district Congress where the veteran freedom fighter lived along with his family.

It has been reported that Shukla, who was a close aide of former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi breathed his last a couple of days back.

Sonia Gandhi later visited the ”Bachat Bhawan” at the district headquarter to monitor the progress of the ongoing developmental programmes in the district. (ANI)

Supreme Court grants relief to anti-Sikh riots case accused Sajjan Kumar

New Delhi, Mar 29 (ANI): The Supreme Court on Monday granted relief to Congress party leader Sajjan Kumar, who is one of the accused in the 1984 anti-Sikh riots case, saying it would not intervene with a Delhi High Court order that granted bail to Kumar in the case.

The apex court raised several questions in this regard and said, “If the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) would have wanted, they could have arrested Sajjan Kumar in 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2008.”

Sajjan Kumar was granted bail by the Delhi High Court on February 26 in connection with two cases registered against him in the 1984 anti-Sikh riots case.

The Karkardooma Court had on February 23 issued a fresh non-bailable warrant against Kumar and slammed the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) for its failure to arrest Kumar and others accused in the case.

Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Lokesh Kumar Sharma had refuted the plea of investigating agencies to issue a proclamation against the accused on the ground that he was absconding.

Earlier, the court had issued two non-bailable warrants against Kumar, who had surrendered before the court on March 10.

The CBI, which arrested one out of 12 accused, said that it conducted raids at Kumar”s residence four times after the warrant was issued on February 17, but failed to apprehend him. It also asked the court to declare the former MP and other accused as absconders.

The CBI had on January 13 charge-sheeted Kumar and others in the two cases accusing them of making provocative speeches, leading to the killing of 12 persons in the riots that followed the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi on October 31, 1984. (ANI)

Sikhs feel offended, as Sajjan Kumar gets bail in 1984-anti Sikh riots case

New Delhi, March 10 (ANI): Scores of Sikhs gathered outside the Karkardooma court in here on Wednesday to lodge their protest against the anticipatory bail granted by the court to the Congress leader, Sajjan Kumar, in cases related to 1984 anti-Sikh riots.

Earlier, the court had issued two non- bailable warrants against the accused.

Sajjan surrendered before the court on Wednesday morning.

Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Lokesh Kumar granted bail to the accused, including Sajjan Kumar,

after they all appeared before him.

Protestors were agitated after Sajjan was granted bail.

“A ray of hope had kindled when the court here issued non-bailable warrants against the accused. Even that

ray of hope is extinguished by the judge. We request the people of India and the Supreme Court that Supreme

Court should fight our case,” said Tarseem Singh, a protestor.

Harvinder Singh Phoolka, Counsel for Victims of the 1984 anti-Sikh riots, expressed his discontent with the

decision and said that he would take the case to the Supreme Court.

“We will file a plea in the Supreme court that the decision is wrong and we will request the Supreme Court

that he (Sajjan Kumar) should be given a temporary bail, till his next appearance in the court, and not a

permanent bail. The High Court hasn”t put any such restriction. The accused was absconding, however, the

High Court hasn”t considered it,” said Harvinder Singh Phoolka.

Central Bureau of Investigation had filed a charge sheet against Sajjan Kumar and others in two cases for

allegedly instigating mobs after the assassination of the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, in 1984.
The anti-Sikh riots in Delhi occurred following the assassination of the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi

by her Sikh bodyguards in 1984.

Activists accused Congress party of having turned a blind eye to the massacre of Sikhs and said some of its

leaders helped orchestrate the rioting. (ANI)

Indira Gandhi’s killers honoured in New Zealand Sikh temple

WELLINGTON: The decision by New Zealand’s largest Sikh temple to hail as martyrs the three men who assassinated Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi has upset some members of the Indian community in Auckland.

The temple in Manukau has hung on its walls portraits of Gandhi’s bodyguards Satwant Singh and Beant Singh, who were killed in a gun battle after firing more than 30 bullets into her in 1984, and of co-conspirator Kehar Singh, who was sentenced to death, the Weekend Herald reported Saturday.

Entitled “Shaheed Bhai” – or martyr brother – they hang alongside others who have been killed for their Sikh beliefs.

The newspaper described how the pictures had divided the Sikh community and upset other Indians in New Zealand’s largest city, which has the country’s largest Asian population.

“If someone wants to honour a terrorist, that’s an individual choice,” Veer Khar, general secretary of the New Zealand Indian Central Association, told the paper.

“But to put them up in a public place, as a community we totally condemn such an activity.”

He acknowledged that atrocities were committed against the Sikh community prior to Gandhi’s assassination, but said honouring the men who killed her was creating unnecessary tension.

“We sympathise with the pain, we don’t deny that those things happened,” he said. “We want to say that we have to move on in life.”

However, Ranvir Lali Singh, a Sikh who has been involved with the temple for 15 years, told the paper that anyone who died for the religion was considered a martyr.

“We don’t consider those who killed Indira Gandhi as terrorists, they are our martyrs,” he said. “She was killed by her Sikh bodyguards as revenge for her attack on the Golden Temple, our holiest shrine, and for that, we consider them our martyrs. There is nothing wrong.”

A spokesman for India’s senior diplomat in New Zealand, High Commissioner Sureesh Mehta, acknowledged the issue was “sensitive”, but declined further comment.

Indira Gandhi backed plot to kill Pak Army officials: Brig. Ahmed

Lahore, Aug.31 (ANI): Former Pakistan Intelligence Bureau (IB) Director General Brigadier (retired) Imtiaz Ahmed has alleged that former Punjab Governor Ghulam Mustafa Khar had hatched a conspiracy to kill several key Pakistan Army officials, and claimed that the plot was backed by the then Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi.

In an interview with a private television channel, Brigadier Ahmed said that Khar had chalked out a plan to kill several important commanders of the Pakistan Army in a bomb blast.e said the plan, according to which the Indian intelligence agency RAW would provide arms to Pakistan, was also approved by then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi.

“An Indian official, Joshi, had arranged Khar’s meeting with Gandhi and finalized the plans,” Brigadier Ahmed said.

However, Khar has rebuked Brigadier Ahmed’s allegations saying he never knew any Indian official named Joshi.

He said some elements had hatched conspiracies to diminish his popularity and acceptance with the Armed Forces.

“I had visited to India to visit the graves of saints, not hatch a conspiracy,” The Daily Times quoted Khar, as saying. (ANI)

Radio Pakistan still hopes to revive Khalistan agitation

Abohar, July 13 (ANI): Radio Pakistan in its latest broadcast has attempted to provoke communal sentiments in Punjab.

In its Punjabi Darbar programme, it mentioned about the Blue Star Operation of 1984 and blamed the Akalis for not showing unity in reviving the issue.

Radio Pakistan’s anti-India propaganda and attempt to provoke people have been contested by Prof. Gurdeep Singh, a Sikh Scholar and Rajinder Singh, a village head, in Abohar.

“Sikh religion is beyond politics. The Sixth Guru of Sikhs, Guru Hargobind planned the Akal Takht right in front of Shri Harmander Sahab and the staircase of Akal Takht was constructed from Shri Harmander Sahab, so to make the world know how above the Sikh religion is from politics,” said Prof. Gurdeep Singh, a Sikh scholar,

“There is no discrimination Hindus and Sikhs in India. Pakistan radio wants to create tensions between Hindus and Sikhs. But people here are now well aware of Pakistan’s propaganda. A number of Sikhs have sacrificed their lives for the country. The Sikhs are given equal respect like other religions in the country,” said Rajinder Singh, a village head.

Broadcasters of Radio Pakistan must remember Indian listeners switch on to their channel just to hear the good music of Pakistan and not to their anti-India propaganda.

The four-day Operation Blue Star was an Indian military operation ordered by the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi to remove Sikh separatists who were amassing weapons in the Golden Temple in Amritsar.

It was launched in response to a deterioration of law and order in the Indian state of Punjab. (ANI)

I’m ready to own responsibility for Babri mosque demolition: Uma Bharti

Bhopal, June 30 (ANI): Former Bharatiya Janata Party leader Uma Bharti on Tuesday volunteered to own responsibility for the demolition of Babri mosque at Ayodhya and said that she would have no problem even if she was hanged on the issue.

Reacting to the submission of the Liberhan Commission report on the demolition of the mosque, Uma Bharti said: “Like a good commander, I am ready to own the responsibility of the Babri masjid’s demolition and I have no problem even if I will be hanged on the issue.”

“The report, which has been submitted to the Prime Minister after 17 years of the constitution of the Commission, is an attempt to appease Muslim community,” Bharati alleged.

“The UPA government led by Congress was unable to find a single person responsible for the massacre of 20,000 Sikhs at the behest of Congress after the death of the former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. By doing so they deliberately wanted to term us culprits with an intention to divide Hindus and Muslims for political gains,” Uma alleged.

Uma, however, appealed to the BJP leaders not to apologise for the demolition of Babri mosque as they themselves invited large number of people at Ayodhya for starting the ‘Karseva’. (ANI)

Maneka, Varun and Sonia pay tributes to Sanjay Gandhi

New Delhi, June 23(ANI): Homage was paid to former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi’s son Sanjay Gandhi on his 29th death anniversary at his memorial ‘Shantivana’ in New Delhi on Tuesday.

BJP leader and Sanjay Gandhi’s widow Maneka Gandhi, her son and Pilibhit MP Varun Gandhi, Congress President Sonia Gandhi and Senior Congress leader Moti Lal Vora led a host of distinguished persons who paid homage to the late leader.

Maneka paid floral tribute to her late husband while Varun placed a bouquet of flowers at the memorial amidst a prayer meeting, which was held on the occasion

Sanjay Gandhi had died on this day in 1980 in a plane crash. (ANI)

Sikh organisations to mark 25 years of Operation Bluestar

Sikh organisations to mark 25 years of Operation BluestarAmritsar, March 24 (IANS) Sikh organisations, including some radical ones, are all set to evoke the painful memories of the Indian Army’s storming of the Golden Temple complex in June 1984 to evict heavily armed Sikh extremists.

The Akal Takht, the highest temporal seat of the Sikh religion, the Shiromani Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee (SGPC) and Sikh radicals are already planning events at the temple complex, where the holiest of Sikh shrines Harmandar Sahib (popularly called Golden Temple) is located, here in the first week of June to coincide with the 25th anniversary of Operation Bluestar, the army’s codename for the operation.

Indian Army units had used heavy artillery against the terrorist militia, led by the separatist preacher Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale, holed up inside the shrine complex. Hundreds of people inside the shrine, including Bhindranwale and his armed supporters, and army and police personnel lost their lives in the battle.

The main function, on June 6, will be held at the Akal Takht. The building, which faces the Harmandar Sahib, was heavily damaged in Operation Bluestar.

Despite the passage of 25 years, Operation Bluestar remains etched in the minds of Sikhs as the darkest chapter in the recent history of the community.

Then prime minister Indira Gandhi, whose government in New Delhi gave the order for the army to use all means to flush out terrorists from the Golden Temple complex, was killed by her Sikh bodyguards at her residence on Oct 31, 1984 in a reprisal crime.

The army had faced stiff resistance from the terrorists inside the complex.

The SGPC, the mini-parliament of the Sikh religion that manages Sikh shrines in Punjab, will hold its main function at the Manji Sahib hall of the temple complex.

“We are making preparations for the event this time. We will add more events this year. The main function will be on June 6. We want the function to be held well and go off peacefully,” SGPC president Avtar Singh Makkar told IANS.

Asked if radical leaders would be allowed to take centrestage and raise separatist slogans, as has happened before, Makkar said: “We have seen that such elements raise Khalistan slogans at the end of the function. Though our volunteers are there to prevent them, sometimes they manage to do this.”

Makkar said he did not have confirmation whether or not Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal and Akali Dal President and Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Singh Badal would attend the function.

Getting more hardline, the SGPC had recently brought out its annual calendar with the photograph of the Akal Takht being shown badly damaged in the June 1984 attack.

The use of the photograph by the generally moderate SGPC, which is dominated by Punjab’s ruling Akali Dal, was a clear sign that the organisation was looking at cosying up to radical elements in the community in the run-up to the recent parliamentary elections.

“We are trying to ensure that the SGPC involves all Sikh organisations in the events being held. Sikh bodies will be holding their individual events at the Golden Temple complex and other places in the first week of June,” radical Sikh body Dal Khalsa’s leader Kanwarpal Singh told IANS.

The Khalsa Action Committee (KAC), a committee of various radical organisations, recently held various events to make people aware of its version of what led to Operation Bluestar and how it left the Sikh community scarred.

Organisations like Dal Khalsa and Damdami Taksal are upset with the SGPC, saying it is doing nothing to set up a memorial to those who lost their lives inside the shrine complex during Operation Bluestar.

“The SGPC has already passed a resolution to have a memorial inside the Golden Temple complex. It only needs to implement that. But it is under pressure from the BJP (Bharatiya Janata Party, alliance partner of the Akali Dal in Punjab) not to do it. We cannot make it outside as it will not justify the sacrifice of the martyrs. Inside the shrine complex, the SGPC has control,” Kanwarpal Singh said.

There are plans to bring out a directory of names of all those who were killed inside the shrine during Operation Bluestar. Many innocent civilians, who were stranded inside the shrine on June 2 when the army moved in, were also killed during the operation.

Every year, the first week of June is observed as ‘ghallughara” (genocide) week.

Though terrorism in Punjab (1981-1995) ended many years ago, the anniversary of the Golden Temple attack is observed by radical Sikh organisations every year.

(Jaideep Sarin can be contacted at jaideep.s@ians.in)

pex court to decide Thursday on NSA against Varun

New Delhi, May 13 (IANS) The Supreme Court is likely to take a final call Thursday on the legality of imposing the stringent National Security Act (NSA) on Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Varun Gandhi by the Uttar Pradesh government for his alleged hate speeches during the poll campaign.

A bench of Chief Justice K.G. Balakrishnan is to hear a bunch of lawsuits on the issue, including the latest one filed by Varun Gandhi Wednesday.

In his latest petition, Varun Gandhi, the BJP candidate from the Pilibhit constituency, demanded a compensation of Rs.1 million for his detention for over a fortnight after he was arrested and the NSA charges were applied March 28.

Appearing for the young leader before the bench, former additional solicitor general Mukul Rohtagi also sought the court’s direction to the state government to abide by the state advisory board’s direction to scrap the invocation of the security law against his client.

Citing an apex court ruling, Rohtagi told the bench, which also included Justice P. Sathasivam and Justice Deepak Verma, that the advisory board’s finding on the legality of invocation of NSA against an individual is final and the state government must abide by it.

Rohtagi pleaded to the apex court to dismiss the state government’s lawsuit challenging the advisory board’s order.

He told the court that he would file another lawsuit on behalf of Varun Gandhi by the evening and pleaded to the court to hear it along with other lawsuits on the issue.

The bench allowed him to file the lawsuit and assured him that it would be heard Thursday.

Varun Gandhi’s parole granted by the apex court expires Thursday and his original lawsuit challenging his detention under the NSA and invocation of the security law against him was slated for hearing Thursday.

Varun Gandhi, grandson of late prime minister Indira Gandhi, faced controversy after his reported remarks against the Muslim community during election rallies.

Indira Gandhi was my idol: Priyanka

Amethi (Uttar Pradesh), April 20 (IANS) Priyanka Gandhi Monday said her grandmother and late prime minister Indira Gandhi was her ‘idol’ and also underlined that staying away from active politics was her own decision.

‘She was absolutely my idol at that time,’ Priyanka Gandhi, who is often compared with her grandmother, said here when asked what memories she had of Indira Gandhi as a child.

Priyanka Gandhi also added though people remember Indira Gandhi as a tough leader, for her and her brother she was a ‘gentle and sweet’ grandmother.

‘People I suppose remember her as tough but for her grandchildren she was the gentlest and sweetest grandmother,’ Priyanka Gandhi fondly told English news channel Times Now. She was in Amethi constituency to campaign for her brother and Congress candidate Rahul Gandhi.

She also said her family was not responsible for keeping her away from active politics.

‘It does not come from within. It is absolutely nothing else. My family will fully support me if this is what I want to do, but I simply do not want to,’ Gandhi said.

About her brother not accepting a post in Prime minister Manmohan Singh’s cabinet, she said: ‘That’s really up to him. What he has been doing is extremely important. He has been trying to foster democracy in the Youth Congress and it is extremely important to do what he feels will strengthen the party,’ Gandhi added.
Indo Asian News Service

Gandhi family scion arrested for hate speech given parole

New Delhi – India’s Supreme Court on Thursday ordered the release of the grandson of the late prime minister Indira Gandhi on parole for two weeks to enable him to file his candidacy for general elections.

Varun Gandhi was arrested in late March in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh for allegedly making inflammatory anti-Muslim statements while campaigning for India’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

The 29-year-old was booked under the National Security Act and was lodged in jail in Etah.

A three-judge bench headed by Chief Justice KG Balakrishnan ordered Gandhi’s release, pending a final decision on his lawsuit challenging his arrest by the state government.

The bench dismissed stiff opposition by the Uttar Pradesh government when ordering Gandhi’s temporary release but imposed strict conditions on the politician during his parole, such as not making speeches “likely to cause communal disturbance and hatred among any caste and community.”

The order would allow Gandhi to register as a candidate from the Pilibhit constituency in the state and launch his campaign.

The Indian National Congress party, which leads India’s federal coalition government and is headed by Sonia Gandhi, accused Varun Gandhi and the BJP of playing communal politics.

Varun Gandhi’s mother, Maneka Gandhi, was married to Indira Gandhi’s second son, Sanjay Gandhi. Sonia Gandhi, who was married to Indira’s elder son, Rajiv, is his aunt. The two branches of the family are members of rival political parties.

The Congress party and the BJP lead the two main alliances fighting the five-phased, month-long general elections in India, which began Thursday. (dpa)

PM attacks Left for not cooperating in nuke deal

Kochi, Apr 11 (ANI): Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Saturday condemned the Left for not cooperating with the Central Government during negotiations for the crucial nuclear deal with the US.

Addressing his first election rally here after recovering from a heart bypass surgery, Dr. Singh said, “When our government started the nuclear deal negotiations with the US to end India’s nuclear isolation and to provide the much-needed energy for development, the Left opposed and walked out of our government. Time will prove the wisdom of our decision.”

Singh said the Left has always been on the wrong side of history by not cooperating in the Quit India Movement, Green and IT revolutions.

“The Left that rules the state has unfortunately often been on the wrong side of history. When Mahatma Gandhi started Quit India Movement, the Left did not participate in it. When India became Independent, they said this independence is not for real,” said Singh.

He further accused the Left for its uncooperative attitude in 1960′s when then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi brought in the Green Revolution. Dr. Singh said that the Left had displayed a dismissive behavior by saying that it was only for the benefit of foreign seed companies.

Dr. Singh said that the Left had similarly opposed former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi when he started a communication revolution in the country.

Asserting that there was always a continuous fight for power among the Left leaders, Dr. Singh asked the people to vote for a stable Congress in the coming elections. (ANI)

Prosecute Tytler, Sajjan for 1984 riots: Sikhs

New Delhi, April 9 (IANS) Not mollified by the Congress party dropping Jagdish Tytler and Sajjan Kumar as party candidates for the Lok Sabha polls, many Sikhs are demanding the prosecution of the two for their alleged involvement in the 1984 anti-Sikh riots.

‘This is not a victory. Our issue in Punjab is not about the tickets to Tytler and Kumar. They should be prosecuted,’ Punjab Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Singh Badal said.

The journalist who chucked a shoe at Home Minister P. Chidambaram in protest maintains that justice still needs to be done.

‘I am not feeling victorious. This (move to axe him) may be good politically, but still justice needs to be done,’ Jarnail Singh told IANS.

‘If those who lost their near and dear ones (in the riots) think that it is good, it is fine. But the culprits should be brought to book,’ he said.

Manvinder Singh, a businessman, thinks it is just an ‘eyewash’. He told IANS: ‘It is nothing but an eyewash. If the Congress was really so serious about people’s sentiments, they would not have given ticket to both of them till now. Thanks to Jarnail’s shoe, this will probably be the end of their political careers.’

Jagjit Singh Sandhu, a pilot, told IANS: ‘I think that it’s a gesture by a responsible political party that should be welcomed. Congress has responded to the feelings of the members of a community who feel that these people should not be given tickets till proven innocent by the judiciary.’

Tytler and Sajjan Kumar were alleged to have led mobs during the anti-Sikh riots following the assassination of then prime minister Indira Gandhi in Oct 31, 1984. Over 3,000 Sikhs were believed to have been killed in the riots.

About shoe showers and more in Pakistani newspaper

slamabad, April 9 (IANS) A phenomenon ‘typically requiring the presence of one of more political personages and a crowd of media persons’ is likely to often recur, a tongue in cheek editorial in a Pakistani daily said Thursday, referring to a shoe being tossed at Indian Home Minister P. Chiddambaram by a Sikh journalist in New Delhi.

The combination of politicians and journalists ‘produces a kind of flux from which is expelled an example of the common shoe. The shoe appears to be inexplicably drawn towards the political personage and invariably misses’, The News said.

The editorial was quite appropriately headlined ‘Shoe showers’.

‘Scientists believe that politicians exude a catalytic vapour, a concentration of which builds up in the room where they are ensconced with the media people resulting in the fluxion referred to and the spontaneous fall of shoes.

‘Given the frequency with which the elements (politicians and the press) which produce this effect occur, it is not unreasonable to assume that we will see showers of shoes more frequently in the future.

‘Sales of shoe-proof vests are expected to rise, likewise the sale of socks; as journalists may find that a prerequisite of attendance at any future press conference is the removal of their shoes,’ the editorial maintained.

Jarnail Singh, a reporter with the Dainik Jagran newspaper, Tuesday tossed a sports shoe at Chidambaram during a briefing at the Congress party headquarters because he was dissatisfied with the minister’s reply to a question on the punishment being handed to the perpetrators of the anti-Sikh riots that followed the Oct 31, 1984 assassination of then prime minister Indira Gandhi.

Singh later apologised, saying the manner of protest was wrong but the cause was right.

The Delhi Police didn’t press charges against the journalist after the minister ‘forgave’ him.

Congress drops Jagdish Tytler, Sajjan Kumar

New Delhi, April 9 (IANS) The Congress announced Thursday it had dropped Jagdish Tytler and Sajjan Kumar as its Lok Sabha candidates in the wake of protests over their alleged involvement in the 1984 anti-Sikh riots.

Congress spokesman Janardhan Dwivedi told reporters that the party had decided that ‘they will not be Lok Sabha candidates’ from Delhi in the general elections set to start April 16.

Dwivedi added that both Tytler and Sajjan Kumar had opted out of the contest so as not to vitiate the atmosphere ahead of the April-May polls.

The announcement came on a day of Sikh protests in New Delhi and Punjab against their candidature. Both have denied involvement in the killings of Sikhs after then prime minister Indira Gandhi’s assassination in 1984.

Tytler decision good, but justice is pending, says shoe attacker

New Delhi, April 9 (IANS) Jagdish Tytler’s decision not to contest the Lok Sabha election has not made Jarnail Singh feel victorious. The journalist who chucked a shoe at Home Minister P. Chidambaram in protest maintains that justice still needs to be done.

‘I am not feeling victorious. This (Tytler’s move) may be good politically, but still justice needs to be done,’ Singh told IANS here Thursday.

Singh shot to limelight and became a hero to many after he tossed a shoe at Chidambaram during a press conference Tuesday over the issue of a clean chit given to Tytler in a 1984 anti-Sikh riots case.

‘If the people who lost their near and dear ones think that it is good, it is fine. But the culprits should be brought to book,’ he said.

Refuting the charge that his act was politically motivated, Singh said: ‘I am not with any party and not joining any party. Please concentrate on the issue.’

Singh’s act has added fuel to the widespread discontent among the victims of Sikh riots, which followed the assassination of then prime minister Indira Gandhi in 1984 by two of her Sikh security guards at her residence.

Court adjourns verdict on Tytler till April 28

New Delhi, Apr 9 (ANI): A Kakardooma Court on Thursday postponed the hearing on the Central Bureau of Investigation’s (CBI) plea for closing the 1984 anti-Sikh riots case against former Union Minister Jagdish Tytler.

The court will hear the arguments from both sides on April 28 and 29.

The court held that all evidence filed pertaining to the case needs to be analysed before taking a decision on the CBI’s final closure report.

During the hearing, the CBI argued that the court did not have the power to take a decision on the investigation done by the agency since the case was related to murder.

However, Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Rakesh Pandit overruled the CBI’s point and fixed the argument on the matter for a later date.

The court has also directed the investigating agency to hand it over the CDs containing the evidence in the case.

During the period of the court hearing, over 500 protesters from various Sikh organisations broke the barricades outside the court and climbed over gates.

The protesters, who were agitated over the CBI’s decision to give a clean chit to Tytler, demanded stringent punishment for him for his alleged role in instigating the riots pertaining to killing of three persons when a mob attacked Gurudwara Pulbangash on November 1, 1984.

They even burnt an effigy of Tytler outside the court premises.

Extra police forces were deployed at the court to maintain law and order.

The CBI, on April 2, had recommended quashing of FIR against Tytler as it did not have sufficient evidence to proceed on the matter. On March 28, the CBI filed the report in a sealed envelope before Metropolitan Magistrate Ram Lal Meena.

Tytler was among the three prominent leaders named in the reports on anti-Sikh riots. Two other leaders named were Sajjan Kumar and the late HKL Bhagat.

The 1984 anti-Sikh riots, which claimed the lives of almost 3000 Sikhs, were triggered by the assassination of then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi on October 31, 1984, by two of her Sikh bodyguards. (ANI)