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Govt, Opposition, NGOs up the pressure on Black List issue
WSN Bureau

PUNJAB: After years of virtual and illegally imposed exile on hundreds of Sikh youth, pressure seems to be building up on the Indian Government to review the ridiculously named "Black List" of non-resident Sikhs who have no criminal record but whom New Delhi has not allowed for years to return to India, citing frivolous grounds, but mostly without citing any grounds at all. 

Even Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal has repeatedly talked about this, so has India's former Minority Commission's Chairperson Tarlochan Singh. Former Indian Prime Minister IK Gujral has often taken up the cause, and India's ex-envoy to UK Kuldip Nayar, a known voice of sanity in Indian media, keeps underlining the issue. 

But now, the outcry at the sheer illegality of the Black List has reached such a crescendo that even Congress MLA Sukhpal Singh Khaira recently wrote to the Center to scrap or review the Black List. He cited specific cases where people were being discriminated against. 

So much so that even the Punjab state unit of right-wing Hindu nationalist BJP has now made it clear that it wants the Black List to be thrown in the trash bin. For the record, the Punjab government has requested the Centre to review the ‘blacklist’ and allow those without any criminal record access to India. Incidentally, in most cases, the criminal record is widely known to be cooked up local police stations known for corruption.  

Punjab made the request at a meeting of the inter-ministerial committee looking into problems of NRIs in Delhi on Wednesday.  

Punjab's secretary, NRI affairs, A.S. Chhatwal, said the state government wanted that a more lenient view needed to be taken on the issue of blacklist. He said the Union government had agreed to consider the issue in view of peace in the state.  

Punjab BJP president Rajinder Bhandari had also condemned the Black List after a visit to Canada. The BJP has claimed that during the UPA rule, a large number of NRI Sikhs, who had been allowed travel despite figuring in the blacklist earlier, were being denied it.  

It is now believed that the blacklist has been stuffed with more than 700 names. Most of those whose names figure in the blacklist reside in the UK, Canada and the US.

9 July, 2008
 

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