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Media and a gritty witness shame India judiciary to act
CBI's bid to let Jagdish Tytler off the hook thwarted by court
WSN Bureau

NEW DELHI: Shame came haunting the Indian justice dispensing system in which the rulers, the law enforcement agencies and the judiciary had clearly conspired for years to deny justice to the victims of the 1984 anti-Sikh pogrom, the worst genocide witnessed in South Asia in contemporary history. So much so that one of the key accused rose to become a federal minister even before he could be cleared by the courts.

And then came the final assault on senses. Even as a government-appointed probe commission indicted minister Jagdish Tytler and he had to resign in the wake of a crescendo against him by the civil society, India's top sleuthing agency, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) filed an affidavit in the court that a key witness against Tytler, one Jasbir Singh, was "untraceable" and therefore the case be closed.

The fact leaked out and in no time many media organisations were able to reach across to Jasbir Singh in California with little effort. Activist advocate H S Phoolka's timely book "When A Tree Shook Delhi" also upped the pressure and the Delhi court hearing the matter was forced to tell the CBI in no ncertain terms on
Tuesday to reinvestigate the pogrom in 1984, particularly the role of the former union minister.

Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Sanjiv Jain directed the CBI to record the statement of witness Jasbir Singh, who is currently in the US and submit a report by January 16, 2008. "I am of the opinion that the matter needs to be further investigated," Jain said after Jasbir's counsel Navkiran Singh submitted that the witness was willing to join the investigation.

The genocide in New Delhi was among India's bloodiest in modern times, but what had left the world shocked was the systematic way in which it was carrie dout as mobs moved with voter lists in hand, identifying Sikhs' houses and establishments.

Jagdish Tytler is accused to personally leading blood-thirsty mobs and Jasbir Singh as witness had stated how he saw and heard Tytler admonishing a group about the low number of deaths of Sikhs in his area. Tytler, implicated by two judicial commissions, has denied the charge. The CBI in September this year had asked that Tytler be exonerated of all charges.

The witness, Jasbir Singh, revealed that CBI did not contact him despite being aware of his whereabouts. The court has now asked the CBI to file a report on January 16 next. The ruling came on a petition by the “November-84 Carnage Justice Committee.” Jasbir Singh had throuighout maintained that he was to testify, but expressed his inability to come to India in view of the continuing threat to him and his family members.

It is not clear what prevents the CBI from sending a couple of officers to the US to record the witness' testomony or why can't he be permitted to visit the Indian consulate and submit his testimony through video conference. The CBI is insisting on his physical presence in the court for the purpose.

The case against Tytler, in which the CBI sought to give him a clean chit, was registered in 2005 in connection with the killing of three persons of a Sikh family by a mob in North Delhi on November 1, 1984. It is alleged that Tytler incited the mob.

Among those who had put in a lot of hardwork to make sure that Tytler does not escape the law were AISSF President Karnail Singh Peermohammad and Co-ordination Committee – “Sikhs For Justice".

Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, a New York based attorney who is representing Jasbir Singh said the CBI has time till January 14 to record the statement of Jasbir Singh. He said the CBI can do that either at the Indian Embassy in US or at his law firm’s office in California.

Navkiran Singh, the attorney who represents Jasbir Singh before court in Delhi also suggested to the court that CBI can record Jasbir Singh’s statement through video conferencing and the court also asked the CBI to explore the possibility of recording Jasbir Singh’s statement through video conferencing. Jasbir Singh has said he stood by his indictment of Jagdish Tytler.

19 December, 2007
 

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