Dokument #1329075
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Autor)
From May 4-19, 1988, the Punjabi police and
Indian paramilitary forces laid siege to the Golden Temple in
Amritsar in order to flush out several hundred Sikh extremists who
were engaged in fortifying the temple complex. [ Bryan Johnson,
"Skirmishes, New Fortifications Hint at Violence in Amritsar," in
The Globe and Mail, [Toronto], 6 may 1988.] Although intermittent
gun battles in which approximately 40 extremists were killed took
place, the police and paramilitary forces were reported to have
been relatively restrained in conducting the operation. On the
final day of the siege, 146 extremists surrendered to police. [
"Soldiers Storm Sikh Stronghold in Sacred Temple," in The Globe
and Mail, [Toronto], 18 May 1988, pp. A1 and A2. ] In the weeks
following the successful completion of this operation, Sikh
extremists in the Punjab killed several hundred civilians in
retaliation, mostly migrant agricultural labourers from Bihar. [
Sanjoy Hazarika, "India Sending More Troops to Punjab as Toll
Rises," in The New York Times, 22 May 1988. ]
In the aftermath of the operation ,the Indian authorities are reported to have retrieved numerous documents which allowed them to identify networks of active supporters of the various Sikh extremists groups. [ "Eyes for an Eye," in The Economist, (London: 14 January 1989), p. 32.] Although disruption in extremist activity is reported to have been the result of this action, between July 1988 to January 1989 extremists carried out a series of indiscriminate bombings in which several hundred people were killed. [ "Bombs Kill 32 Near Golden Temple," in The New York Times, 18 June 1988.] Prior to the operation at the Golden Temple, Sikh extremists had primarily relied upon automatic weapons in their attacks on both police and civilian targets. [ "Playing to a New Tune," in India Today, (New Delhi: Living Media India Pvt. Ltd., 15 January 1988). ]
Despite the bombing campaign, the number of
people killed in extremist violence in the Punjab actually began to
decline in the latter part of 1988. [ Ibid.] The fact that
the Supreme Court acquitted Balbir Singh, one of the persons
implicated in the conspiracy to assassinate Prime Minister Indira
Gandhi, no doubt ameliorated the sense of alienation harboured by
many Sikhs, ["Court Frees Man Convicted of Gandhi Assassination,"
in The Toronto Star, 4 August 1988.] as did the release of 138
extremists who had been held in the Jodhpur prison since their
capture during the Indian army's battle with Sikh extremists at the
Golden Temple in June 1984. [ Barbara Crosette, "Gandhi Goes to
Punjabis with a Plea," in The New York Times, 22 December
1988.]
During the past month, violence has again
been on the rise in the Punjab. [ Foreign Broadcast Information
Service, Daily Report: Near East and South Asia, (Washington: 25
January 1989), p. 61.] The source of this latest upsurge in
violence was the hanging of two Sikhs on 6 January 1989 for
conspiring to assassinate the late prime minister, Indira Gandhi.
In the wake of their execution, extremists in Punjab have allegedly
killed dozens of people. In a few instances, retaliatory hangings
of Hindus have been reported. In response to the increased activity
of Sikh extremists, Indian police and paramilitary forces have
stepped up their operations, reportedly killing a number of
extremists in various encounters. [ Ibid., 23 January 1989,
p.50.]
On 3 March 1989, Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi announced that he was
going to release all but a few of the remaining Jodhpur detainees
who had been taken into custody during the Indian Army action at
the Golden Temple in June 1984. [ Sanjoy Hazarika, "Gandhi to Free
Jailed Sikhs and Relax Curbs in Punjab," in The new York Times, 4
March 1989. ] Gandhi also indicated that village council elections
would be held in the near future and that the power of the police
and security forces to conduct searches and arrests without
warrants and to use deadly force in pursuing terrorists in Punjab
would be revoked, except in several districts that are still
considered disturbed areas. [ Ibid.]
Endnotes