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sukhbir

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  1. TIMES NEWS NETWORK & AGENCIES[ THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 2004 11:40:32 AM ] CHANDIGARH: At least four prisoners, including three prisoners being tried in the case relating to the assassination of former Punjab chief minister Beant Singh, have escaped from a jail here by tunnelling their way out. The prisoners, who bolted from Burail Jail on Wednesday night, include Jagtar Singh Tara, Jagtar Singh Hawara, Paramjit Singh Pheora and Dev Singh. The escape came to light Thursday at around 7 am when the terrorists were not found in their cells. The terrorists dug a tunnel from inside the jail, taking advantage of lax security on a rainy and cold night, officials said. All four belonged to the Babbar Khalsa outfit. Police said a massive manhunt had been launched in the northern states to track down the terrorists. A red-faced Union Territory administration has so far refused to comment on the jail break, saying that the matter is being investigated. Top UT officials including Home Secretary, Inspector General of UT police, Deputy Commissioner, SSP and a large posse of policemen have arrived at the Burail Jail. The main entrance to the jail has been blocked to keep the media and curious onlookers at bay. Authorities said security forces in Punjab, Haryana, Delhi, Himachal Pradesh, Rajasthan and Jammu and Kashmir had been put on high alert. The terrorists were being tried inside the high-security jail since 1995. They were lodged in a special security cell, separated from other inmates. Former chief minister Beant Singh , credited for the return of normalcy in Punjab after a decade o f Sikh militancy, was assassinated by a human bomb, Dilawar Singh, at the Punjab civil secretariat complex on August 31, 1995. The first charge in the case was filed on November 29, 1995 followed by a second on December 18,1995. The CBI went on to file another chargesheet on February 10, 1996. The final chargesheet was filed in November 1997. Tara is among the two undertrials who had admitted involvement in the case. http://www.tribuneindia.com/2004/20040122/main10.htm Beant Singh murder case accused escape from jail Chandigarh, January 22 Four undertrials, including three accused in the Beant Singh assassination case, escaped from the high security Burail jail in Chandigarh on Thursday, jail sources said. Those escaped included Jagtar Singh Hawara, Jagtar Singh Tara and Paramjit Singh, the three main accused in the assassination of Punjab Chief Minister Beant Singh in 1995, sources said. The fourth was an undertrial attached as a helper to the accused. The four escaped by digging about a 100-foot-long tunnel from their barrack inside the prison to a point outside the jail boundary, sources added. Senior civil and police officials, including Chandigarh Deputy Commissioner and District Magistrate Arun Kumar, who is also Inspector General of prison, have reached the Burail jail. The proceedings of the Beant Singh assassination case were being conducted within the high security prison. Senior Superintendent of police Gaurav Yadav while talking to PTI confirmed the escape of the four prisoners and added at the moment no further details could be given. Beant Singh was assassinated in a human bomb blast out side the Punjab and Haryana Civil Secretariat in Chandigarh on August 31, 1995. — PTI :nihungsmile: All readers include these chardikalla singhs in your ardass, may waheguru protect,shelter and guide them to safety and freedom. Sukhbir Singh
  2. Waheguru Ji Ka Khalsa Waheguru Ji Ki Fateh, As you will see from the date of the BBC report below it is coming up to one year since the Indian state admitted that the five 'Pakistani terrorists' that they claimed were responsible for the execution of 35 Sikh men on the eve of Bill Clintons visit to India were infact innocent Muslim villager's. As you read the article below you will see that DNA samples handled by government agencies had been tampered with. Again this is reluctantly admitted by the state and not simply my or anybody else's opinion. Clearly the killing of these innocents was the first step in covering the complicity of the indian security forces in the Sikh killing's, the subsequent tampering of the evidence was an attempt to hide the true identity of the so called 'terrorists' that india claimed were Pakistani agent's but who we know now were simply local Muslim youth's. The indian security forces did go to great lengths to burn and disfigure the bodies after murdering them so as to make identification impossible, miraculously although the bodies were charred beyond recognition the plastic Pakistani identity cards they were supposedly carrying were intact ! The evidence is clearly here that the government is still involved in a rather poor cover up, poor because it doesn't really cover up anything. At the time of the murders many savvy commentators were already questioning as to who the beneficiary of such an action would be. The leader of the world's superpower is visiting india that very evening to discuss amongst other thing's Kashmir. Bear in mind that no Sikh has been attacked to date in the long violent struggle within Kashmir, Pakistan decides to hand india the ammunition it needs to convince the US that Pakistan is a supporter of terrorism by massacring 35 Sikhs and the charade continues as the indian army round up the Pakistani killers, kill and then burn them. Result, india is vindicated as a victim enduring ongoing provocation from blood thirsty diabolical Muslim terrorist group's that are covertly sponsored by Pakistan. That's one way to get Bill on your side and what's the cost? Well... 35 Sikhs and 5 Muslims, a bargain by indian standards. The reason I am posting this now is two fold, firstly because it's going to be a year since this information came into the public domain, predictably india is sat on its hand's, perhaps remembering that they managed to white wash the Delhi pogroms successfully by delaying report after report and court trial after court trial and waiting for the Sikhs to forget. You cannot blame them for thinking we will forget Chitisingpora in time as well. And secondly because the recent anniversary of the criminal bluestar and it's massacres revealed to me a certain section within the Sikh community that feel that what happened in 1984 is history we should neither discuss nor remember but conveniently forget, I admit I understand the sentiment but it is borne out of ignorance. 1984 did not just 'occur' it was not a coincidental event, the catalyst's for that period can be traced back several decades to the time of 'independence'. Equally the events of that period (84) did not end on the 31st December 1984 nor did they end ten year's ago or last night for that matter, remember Amnesty's latest report into the Panjab and S. Kutha's acquittal were announced only this year. We are not talking about the past but the here and now, Chittisingpora and othe r massacres will continue to plague us until we can find the courage to realise our position within the indian state and thus the world order. In many way's burying your head in the sand can be a quite attractive option but bluestar, woodrose, black thunder etc. are the price you pay. If we are not careful we will get a reputation for being a forgetful people and so we will continue to suffer. I am sure that the likes of Sajjan Kutha, HKL Faghat and Jagdish Titler cannot believe they are still breathing although I am equally sure they never thought they would spend a night behin d bar's, well not in the worlds largest hypocrisy anyway. By the same token there are people there in Delhi who know who removed those turbans, who tied those Chitisingpora villagers hands behind their backs, who lined them up in front of a wall with their families and who shot them dead and you know something else? They like S. Kutha and co. have nothing to worry about because you see the Sikhs, well they have become a forgetful lot. The question is are they right? Gur Fateh Sukhbir Singh
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