Monday, November 3, 2014

Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Life [Excellent Rare Documentary]




SEE ALSO: 

Apart from historicizing the caste question in its emergence and feudal mode of production, Com. Anuradha wrote perceptibly in the Anti-Brahminical and Dalit Movement in Colonial and Post-Colonial India, including mapping the anti-Brahminical Bhakti Movement. Her writings on Phule, Ambedkar, Periyar and Dalit assertions in Maharashtra assumes importance because those were important milestones in the sub-altern resistance to Brahminical oppression in India.

http://democracyandclasstruggle.blogspot.co.uk/2013/01/anuradha-ghandy-on-colonial-and-post.html

In 1936, Dr B.R. Ambedkar was asked to deliver the annual lecture by the Hindu reformist group, the Jat-Pat-Todak Mandal (Forum for Break-up of Caste) in Lahore. When the hosts received the text of the speech, they found the contents “unbearable” and withdrew the invitation. Ambedkar then printed 1,500 copies of his speech at his own expense and it was soon translated into several languages. Annihilation of Caste would go on to have a cult readership among the Dalit community, but remains largely unread by the privileged castes for whom it was written. Ambedkar’s landmark speech has now been carefully annotated and reprinted. 

http://democracyandclasstruggle.blogspot.co.uk/2014/03/india-doctor-and-saint-we-need-ambedkar.html


Debunking the Gandhi Myth : Arundhati Roy interview by Lara Flanders



http://democracyandclasstruggle.blogspot.co.uk/2014/10/debunking-gandhi-myth-arudhati-roy.html


From Grief Over Kobane To Chaos: Istanbul's Kurdish Riots



Democracy and Class Struggle offers a Red salute to martyrs Abdullah Sinar and Suphi Nejat Agimasli - Long Live the immortals of struggle in our memory - Long Live Struggle for Kurdish Freedom.

By their actions they are our comrades - it is what they do not the political labels that count.

Sunday, November 2, 2014

India: Maoists call for Telangana bandh on November 8th



HYDERABAD: The Communist Party of India (Maoist) announced its return to action in Telangana on Saturday by calling for a one-day bandh on November 8 to protest the 'inept policies' of the TRS government that is resulting in farmer suicides.
In a statement, the party's Telangana State Committee (NTSZC) spokesperson Jagan said that chief minister K Chandrasekhar Rao had claimed that Naxalites were true patriots during his election campaign and that he would implement their agenda when he comes to power.
On the contrary, KCR was behaving in the same manner as the earlier chief ministers by trying to suppress free speech, Jagan said. The Maoist leader also charged KCR with making irresponsible statements blaming the previous governments for not being able to supply farmers with at least three hours of power every day.
The CPI (Maoist) also held the chief minister responsible for the spate of suicides in the past few months. "KCR has been making statements that the power situation would be the same for the next three years. This has resulted in depression among farmers who have been taking their lives," the statement said.
The government has to take responsibility for the suicides numbering more than 265 so far in the past few months, the statement said and requested people from all sections of society to join the bandh.

Saturday, November 1, 2014

JNU Student and Cultural Activist Hem Mishra : Letter from Nagpur Jail






Following is the translated (originally in Hindi) text of Hem Mishra’s letter, who is currently lodged in Nagpur Central Jail.

Friends,

Last month, 20th of August marked the completion of a year of my incarceration by the Maharashtra Police. In spite of being a cultural activist and a student of the well-known Jawaharlal Nehru University, I have been booked under several clauses of UAPA (Unlawful Activities Prevention Act).

 I have been imprisoned in the High Security Cell (called Anda Cell) of the Nagpur Jail in extreme segregation. On 6th September my bail petition was rejected in the Gadhchiroli sessions court of Maharashtra. Inside the closed doors of the jail, I had hoped that justice will shine through like a ray of light. But the rejection of my plea, has instead put my hopes to rest.

The court order denies my natural right to breathe in open air and live a free life. Today, through the efforts of many democratic and progressive individuals and organisations, it has been ensured that the process of seeking bail from the court should begin as soon as possible. It has become a burning issue in the country today, that how the powers-that-be find it convenient to prey on dissenters and imprison them in thousands, in various jails of the country. It is due to the efforts of democratic and progressive people that even the Supreme Court has come to the conclusion that the right to seek bail has to be ensured to all prisoners-under-law. From time to time, the Supreme Court has given specific directives to lower courts as well to ensure this. Despite all these the Gadhchiroli Sessions has refused to accept my bail petition and enforced further confinement on a cultural activist.

Before my arrest in August last year, I was a student of Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi. Over there, along with my classes, I used to participate in seminars, public meetings, discussions on various political and social issues of the country and the world. I would participate in the struggles of the students for their rights on the campus, in struggles expressing solidarity with workers in factories, agitations by peasants against land acquisition, caste atrocities and discrimination, in programmes against violence on women, against state repression on people’s movements, against imperialist onslaughts and anti-people policies imposed on the people by the state. With the conviction that cultural resistance is indispensible to these fights, I used to sing songs and act in plays that would take these struggles to more people.

My journey as a cultural activist began in Almora town in Uttarakhand. I remember when I came to the city for my schooling from a very backward village about 30 km away. At the time, a movement was underway demanding separate statehood for Uttarakhand. The youth involved in the movement would often stall classes even in school and urged school-going students to get involved in the movement too. I too became part of the agitation for statehood in its last phase, where people from several walks of life were participating. Students, teachers, staff and clerks, women, workers, peasants, writers, journalists, lawyers and cultural activists participated eagerly and in large numbers. The hopeless stagnancy of the lives of women, unemployment among the youth, rapid out-migration from the hills, dreams of building a society based on egalitarian ideals and a democratic Uttarakhand found expression in the songs of famous cultural activist Girish Tiwari (Girda). Seeing his performances amidst thousands of spectators, attracted me towards cultural activism.

After finishing school when I entered college for higher education, I saw that students mobilised during the struggle for Uttarakhand, were fighting for students’ rights and also to establish a democratic social order in the newly formed Uttarakhand. I joined with them in their endeavour to establish a society free of exploitation and based on equality. The songs of the people and their aspirations, plays etc. had become an important part of these agitations. Through these we could make common students aware about their rights as well as conscious about the injustice, exploitation and oppression prevalent in the society around us.

But even after the state of Uttarakhand was formed, the scenario in the hills did not change. Profit mongering big multinational companies continued to loot and plunder natural resources by displacing people from their land; big hydro-electric projects continued to be passed which handed over water resources to private corporations of this country and abroad; sanctuaries continued to proliferate denying the people of the hills from accessing the forest; violence on women, atrocities on dalits, exploitation of workers and unemployment continued as before. Liquor businesses began to flourish and those in the government, inebriated with new-found power remained miles away from the pains of the people. While the struggle for Uttarakhand was going on, some officials had been charged of opening fire on protestors in Khatima, Mussouri and Muzaffarnagar and raping women. These officials were never punished, but instead promoted.

Aggrieved by these continuing injustices, new burning questions gave shape to different kinds of struggles. I too was involved in these developments. In the course of these struggles, many student activists, social workers, landless labourers, workers and women were charged of treason under draconian laws and imprisoned. I was part of agitations demanding the release of these activists as well.
I completed my graduation in Mathematics form Kumaon University of Uttarakhand, followed by a PG Diploma in Journalism and Mass Communication.

After that I registered myself in BA Chinese Language in Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi in 2010.

While studying in JNU, I came to know about Dr. Prakash Amte, who works to provide health facilities to tribals in the very backward area of Bhamragarh in Maharastra.

Inspired by his work, I became eager to meet him.

On 19th August 2013, I set out from Delhi, enthused to meet him. The next day, that is, on 20th August 2013 I deboarded at Ballarshah railway station at around 9:30 am and left the station to look for a vehicle to take me to Dr. Amte’s hospital. Suddenly someone came from the back and held me with such strength that I could not move.

Before I could fathom why I was being restrained like this, 10-12 men attacked me one after the other. I felt that worse was yet to come and started to shout for help. But this could create trouble for the assailants, so they shut my mouth with their hands and put me in a Tata-Sumo like car which was standing a little distance away.

I still did not know who these kidnappers were, why I had been kidnapped like this and where I was being taken. After a little while, my eyes and my entire face was covered with a black cloth and my hands were caught so that I neither saw where I was being taken, nor could I save myself from the blows and kicks being showered on me. When I asked where I was being taken, my queries were met with abuses, threats and more physical attack.

After an hour of travel, one of them removed the cloth from my face and showed me his ID card. It was then that I understood that the kidnappers were none other than officials of the Gadhchiroli police Special Branch. I was so far not told where I was being taken and my eyes were covered again. Approximately after two more hours of travelling, I was taken out of the car and the black cloth was again removed from my eyes.

Now I could see a large field to my left where a helicopter was stationed and around it some uniformed police moved busily. To my right were some government buildings and right ahead were some other buildings. I was taken to the first floor of one of these buildings put in one room, and after a while, in another.

While entering the second room my eyes fell on a name-plate on the door, which told me that I was being held at the Gadhchiroli Police Headquarters, and being taken to meet SP Suvaid Haq. 
I introduced myself to Suvaid Haq, who was seated on an ostentatious arm-chair, and asked why I had been kidnapped and held without any reason or heed to legality.

He charged me with more threats. Within a short while two local youth from the village were brought in. In fact they too had been abducted just like me; they were the tribal youth, who the police are claiming to have caught with me. The way these youth were treated, it became clear what the grand plan of the police was behind our arrests.

I was then taken to yet another room, where every kind of custodial violence was inflicted on me for three days. Bajirao (a kind of baton which inflicts maximum hurt, while does not leave wound marks) was used to hit me, especially on the soles of my feet, I was also kicked and punched till my whole body was numb. In these ways I was beaten up every day till a point of unconsciousness, and yet in these three days I was never for a second given a chance to sleep.

After three days of such cruel measures of torture in illegal detention, I was dumped in Aheri Police Station on 23rd August 2014. About 40 hours after arrest I was produced in Aheri Magistrate Court. Till now even after my repeated request, the police refused to inform my family about my arrest. Only after I finally made this request to the magistrate, the police was forced to do so from the court itself.

The magistrate court remanded me to ten days of police custody.

Three days after I had been abducted from Ballarshah station and kept in three days illegal confinement, the police reported to the media that they had arrested me 300 kms from Ballarshah, near Aheri Bus Stand. It was only an eyewash to show that my detention as legal.

On 2nd September 2013, when I was produced in court again, the police custody was increased again by fourteen days. For this entire period of 24 days of police custody, I was cooped in a filthy and reeking lock up. I was given food just enough to keep me alive. For the first ten days I was neither allowed to bathe, nor brush my teeth. My clothes, tooth-brush, money, ID card and everything else I was carrying was seized at the time of my arrest. Only after my father and friends gave me some articles of daily need on the 2nd September hearing, I could finally take a bath, brush my teeth and change the clothes that I was sweating in for the last ten days.

During the 24 days of police custody, Maharashtra Police, ATS, IB, and intelligence agencies of Delhi, Uttarakhand, UP, Chattisgarh and Andhra Pradesh continued the same mental and physical excesses that I was put through in the first three days of illegal custody. My facebook, gmail and rediffmail usernames were extracted from me and their passwords tracked. I am quite certain that the police and intelligence agencies are still misusing my email accounts and facebook account.

While protests took place in different parts of the country and the world against my arrest, the police continued to harass me. In fact the police wanted to keep me in custody for even longer and tried to push for this extension on the 16th September hearing. But due to the intervention of my lawyer, their plan was foiled, and the magistrate sent me to judicial custody (Nagpur Central Jail) instead of the torture chamber of police custody.

Here I was sent to barrack no. 8 which was a wing where people charged of treason, much like myself, under anti-people laws like UAPA, were imprisoned. I found that many among them were student activists in universities in Maharashtra, many were dalits and about 40 of them were adivasis youth. The numbers increased or decreased depending on how many could be framed on false charges. As time passed, in my conversations with the adivasis youth, I became privy to the inhuman and brutal torture met out to them in police custody, which lasted for months, after which they were finally handed over to judicial custody.

The textbooks of law entitle prisoners to the right to speedy trial, but for these adivasi these democratic rights are nothing but farce. Some of them have been in jail for 2 years, some for 3 years, and some even for 5 long years; and they are forced to go through daily torture. A minimum of 6 cases and in some instances 40 cooked-up cases have been slapped on these adivasis youth, so they cannot even imagine filing bail petition.

Months and months pass between one court hearing and the next, even after a prisoner is first produced in court. Most of the adivasis youth I met in Nagpur Central Jail, have their cases being heard in Gadhchiroli Sessions Court, as is mine. Here the provision of producing the accused at every hearing has been discontinued. In place of that video conferencing has been introduced to speak to the prisoner when the judge so wishes.

Because of this prisoners are not able to talk to their lawyers, or the judge directly, and they cannot possibly know exactly how their case is proceeding. Additionally a fair trial is not imaginable through video conferencing, since it takes place under the control of the jail authorities, and not in relatively neutral setting of the court.

Such a farce of a court hearing is only to enough to enquire about the next hearing. Often, due to technical faults, even this small possibility to plead to the court is closed for prisoners. Owing to such conditions, two of my fellow inmates, who are adivasis, have already been declared guilty.

Prisoners are allowed to meet their relatives and even their lawyer through a meshed window. In that small window all prisoners crowd around, eager to talk to their near ones. Only 15-20 minutes are permitted for the prisoners to talk to their relatives who have come from afar to meet them, or lawyers with whom it is absolutely necessary to talk at length about the case.

Starting 31st January 2014, 169 under-trial prisoners united to begin an indefinite hunger strike with 4 basic demands, against the abovementioned means of oppression that are common inside jails. In this agitation prisoners who have been charged with UAPA, MCOCA and murder, took part; seven of them being women charged with UAPA. The demands of the agitation were that speedy trial must take place, that under-trials must be entitled to physical presence in courts, that bail petitions must proceed with directives from the Supreme Court so that bail becomes a smoother process.

But on the very first day of the agitation, all participants booked under UAPA were taken away and locked up in the High Security Cell (anda cell) of the prison. Out of those locked up in anda cells that day, 7 including myself, have all been kept here for more than 7 months. We are not allowed to meet other prisoners in the jail premises. These barracks are very small and an open space of only 40 metres to walk about, has become our world.


My experiences of the past one year, including torture in police custody and solitary confinement of jails have made me realise how important political and cultural activism is for taking ahead the cause of changing society as well as for fighting for the rights of prisoners like me.

I appeal to all to speak out for the release of thousands and thousands of adivasis, dalits, women, workers, peasants and activists, mercilessly incarcerated in various jails of the country.

With these hopes,

Hem Mishra

UT no. 56, High Security Cell
Nagpur Central Jail
Nagpur, Maharashtra
Dated 18.09.2014

For more information about the arrest and imprisonment and unproven charges on Hem Mishra, see http://sanhati.com/articles/7924/



Inspiring Interview with Ramiro Gomez humanitarian activist in Lugansk



Switch on the subtitles for English Translation



LUHANSK, November 2. /TASS/. Foreign observers monitoring elections in Ukraine's self-proclaimed Luhansk People’s Republic mark a high voter turnout at polling stations which opened at 8am, Moscow time.
“We have just visited a polling station that was filled to capacity. My first impression is that people show huge interest in the elections,” Manuel Ochsenreiter from Polling stations open in Luhansk People’s Republic and Donetsk People’s Republic

He said there were hundreds of people in the premises, elderly and families with children among them. The observer said he had seen no violations as of yet, adding that the elections proceeded calmly and marking efficient security measures.

Republic’s incumbent leader Igor Plotnitsky, head of the Federation of Trade Unions Oleg Akimov, Health Minister Larisa Airapetyan and businessman Viktor Penner are running for the post of Luhansk republican leader.

Three public movements, including Peace to Luhansk Land, Luhansk Economic Union and People’s Union are vying for 50 seats in the People’s Council. Deputies in 


India: East Delhi Trilokpuri Riots investigated by National Commission for Minorities



                        Drone over Trilokpuri during riots


A disproportionate number of muslim youth had been arrested from the area after the communal violence between October 24 and 27 even as the police refused to register FIRs behalf of individuals whose shops had been damaged or burned down during the violence.

“We visited the area last week. Several families reported that they were not being allowed to even see or meet family members arrested. We have communicated the residents' grievances to the Delhi police. As Lieutenant Governor Najeeb Jung was away from Delhi at the time and returned this Monday, we have sought meetings with him as well,” said Farida Khan, member, National Commission for Minorities. 

The NCM planned to approach the Delhi government for assessment of and compensation for damages to enterprises and loss of livelihood for several residents who are daily wage labourers too, she added.


Besides NCM, following an application by advocates Vrinda Grover and Aslam Ahmed, the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) had on October 30 issued a notice to the Commissioner of Police, Delhi to submit a detailed report into the matter within two weeks.


India: Sardar Vallabhai Patel- True story of 'Iron man of India.' by Harsh Thakor



Today, on October 31st the nation celebrates the 139th birthday of Sardar Vallabhai Patel who is projected as a champion amongst Indian leaders and hailed for uniting India into a federal state.

Intellectuals overlook his supression of the Telengana Armed struggle, communal outlook and pro-industrialist stance but hail his anti-Nehru position and statesmanship.

Idolizing Sardar Patel as a role model would be the equivalent of glorifying the pro-liberalization and globalization policies of the current Indian state and patronizing the big industrialists.

He may have been a dynamic politician but we have to assess the direction in which he harnessed his resources. Personally I would not rate Nehru any higher as he was a psuedo--socialist equally responsible for suppressing Communists and morally not secular..

I would debate whether we should assail Sardar Patel as a great political leader  when he was hardly sympathetic to the cause of the Kashmiri people's right to self-determination and with Nehru and Gandhi opposed the Naval rating uprising.

Arguably his uniting of 500 princely states was a historic achievement but even if we uphold it we must not ignore his treacherous stand on Hyderabad and Telengana.

Intellectuals glorify him and state that it should have been Sardar and not Nehru.

To me they were morally the same unlike writers like A.K Noorani.

Arguably the Sardar even if one upholds his positive personal aspects or unification achievement must be exposed for negative aspects.

The most negative aspects was his opposition to the naval ratings strike,his crushing of the Telengana armed struggle by sending the Indian army, killing 4000 peasants..

In 1948 he promoted Hinduism by placing Hindu idols in the Babri Masjid.

Today in many ways Narendra Modi is a cruder version of Sardar Patel. 

In an era where Hindu fascistic tendencies are far more prevalent and repression on democratic forces is greater.

I recommend readers to read Suniti Kumar Ghosh's 'India and the Raj' which clarifies role."Patel had strong ties with the business community who willingly cooperated with him."G.D.Birla stated"

Many a time Sardar utilized my help and money."

However  I would not rate Nehru any higher than Sardar Patel as he was a psuedo--socialist equally responsible for suppressing Communists and morally not secular. I staunchly combat intellectual who think Nehru was greater or more progressive as all his actions were morally anti-communist.

Nehru endorsed Khrushchevite  Soviet Union and opposed Socialist China in the war.

I suggest readers read 'Indian National Congress-how real,how national 'by R.U.P.E of 1997 .I am critical of Rajani Palme Dutt's praise of Nehru's leadership and policies. in 'India Today.

'In essence Gandhi, Nehru and Sardar Patel were the same.

Below is an excerpt from A.G.Noorani

A cabal of self-confessed Hindu nationalist, as distinct from Indian nationalists, consistently lauds Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel because it finds in him a soulmate. 

He is not praised by himself; significantly, he is always pitted against Nehru. 

By A.G. NOORANI


"The communalism of a majority is apt to be taken for nationalism."
- Jawaharlal Nehru on January 5, 1961.

INDIA: CONDEMN DASTARDLY MASSACRE OF SIKHS ON 30TH ANNIVERSARY ! MAY THE CULPRITS BE PUNISHED! REMEMBER THIS DARK EVENT WITH SHAME! BY HARSH THAKOR



Let us dip our blood on 30th anniversary of Sikh massacre today which took place in Delhi from October 31st to November 3rd in 1984 in the aftermath of the death of Indira Gandhi.

No event arguably hurt a single community since the 2nd world war as harshly as the Sikh community was  in the 1984 riots.

Above all it was not a Hindu-Sikh riot but massacre perpetrated by forces of the state.

The event exposed it's true nature.

It's memories still are etched in the minds of the Sikh people.

We commemorate this day in memory of the late prime minster's death and the birthday of Sardar Vallabahai Patel, but forget it was the inaugural day of one of the most gruesome massacres.

This event will remain as one of the darkest days ever in the history of India..

To this day the people responsible have not been brought to the book and one of the assasins wrongly awarded capital punishment.

It was not the Hindus who were responsible but the Congress politicians who incited the mob.
In fact several Hindu familes went out of the way to save their Sikh brethren.

The riots spread to Kolkata,Kanpur,Patna etc.

The most important aspect is to so analyze the historical context of the Punjab problem and how Indira Gandhi herself indirectly sponsored the Khalistani phenomenon.

While condemning the assassination we have to condemn the dastardly assault on the Sikh community many times more! 

The author can't forget the fear psychosis created in the Sikh community after the riots in every nook and corner of India.

Sikh taxi drivers shaved of their beards, children hid in dustbins.

The psyche of the Sikh community was deeply hurt and for the first time tensions communalized between Sikhs and Hindus in Punjab.

Nevertheless there were several instance of Sikh lives being saved by Hindu neighbours giving them shelter. 

Amazingly Rajiv Gandhi justified it stating :"When a great tree falls,mother earth shakes."

Later on February 15th. an AFDR publication of translation of the PUDR report on the massacre was seized by the Jalandhar police which had alaredy sold out 7000 editions.

The PUDR report was one of the most concise reportings of the true background and events of the massacre which was perpetrated by the Congress leaders.

I recommend everyone to read the PUDR-PUCL report of 1984 which should be engraved for ever in the annals of history.

The massacre instigated fury in many section sof society,particularly city youth.

As a college student I can never forget the anger in the hearts of the youth in Mumbai and in sections of workers who participated in a series of protests.

The 'Ekta' communal harmony repeatedly condemned the riots.Student bodies like Vidhayarti Pragahti Sanghatana and Andhra Pradesh Radical Students Union and civili liberties organizations like C.P.D.R.and Lok Shahi Hakk Sanghatana  vociferously condemned the massacre and exposed the event in the journal 'Kalam.'In the last 2 decades significant meetings were held by forces like Democratic Students Union in Delhi and Jawaharlal University on the gruesome incident.

The concerted protest gatherings and cultural programmes in Mumbai live in my mind till this day.

Till today hardly any justice has been done and Sikh communal forces like Akali Dal have used the riots as a pretext to propagate fundamentalist poltics.It is significant that the Akali Dal is allied with the BJP in Punjab who earlier sponsored communal terrorism.Today the Hindu fascistic communal trend will also use this issue to promote their interests but history always records how the pretext of 'Hindus' was used as an excuse to attack the Sikh community in 1984.

Only a concerted peoples movement brought the culprits close to the book and created havoc in the hearts of the Congress party.The fury of the incident is still prevalent in the hearts of relatives of victims like a flame burning.We must not be fooled by the promises of the BJP government who are trying to woo the Sikh community riot victim's relatives with financial promises who  may never bring the perpetrators of the riots to the book.The 'Hindutva' ideology infact contradicts its loyalty to the Sikh community.The Communist revolutionary groups took this cause as a major event in their agenda.Sadly it is the voices of Sikh communal organizations  that have been redressed more than secular revolutionary forces.

When I passed down a street in the vicinty of  New Delhi in an autorickshaw I saw a road  politician Jagdish Tytler who instigated the riots.It speaks volumes about the level of injustice in so -called 'democracy',with opressors let scot -free.

It was tragic that a community  which served the country with such valour and loyalty in the armed forces and police were attacked as though they were gangs of criminals.

The 1984 anti-Sikhs riots or the 1984 Sikh Massacre were a series of pogroms[2][3][4][5] directed against Sikhs in India, by anti-Sikh mobs, in response to the assassination of Indira Gandhi by her Sikh bodyguards. There were more than 8,000[6] deaths, including 3,000 in Delhi.[4] The Central Bureau of Investigation, the main Indian investigating agency, is of the opinion that the acts of violence were organized with the support from the then Delhi police and some central government officials.[7] Rajiv Gandhi was sworn in as Prime Minister after his mother's death and, when asked about the riots, said "when a big tree falls, the earth shakes".[8]

During the Indian Emergency imposed by Indira Gandhi in the 1970s, thousands of Sikhs campaigning for autonomous government were imprisoned.[citation needed] The sporadic violence continued as a result of an armed Sikh separatist group which was designated as a terrorist entity by the Indian government. In June 1984, during Operation Blue Star, Indira Gandhi ordered the Indian Army to attack the Golden Temple and eliminate any insurgents, as it had been occupied by Sikh separatists who were stockpiling weapons. Later operations by Indian paramilitary forces were initiated to clear the separatists from the countryside of Punjab state.[9]

The violence in Delhi was triggered by the assassination of Indira Gandhi, India's prime minister, on 31 October 1984, by two of her Sikh bodyguards in response to her actions authorising the military operation. The Indian government reported 2,700 deaths in the ensuing chaos. In the aftermath of the riots, the Indian government reported 20,000 had fled the city, however the People's Union for Civil Liberties reported "at least" 1,000 displaced persons.[10] The most affected regions were the Sikh neighbourhoods in Delhi. Human rights organisations and newspapers across India believe the massacre was organised.[4][7][11] The collusion of political officials in the massacres and the Judiciary's failure to penalise the killers alienated normal Sikhs and increased support for the Khalistan movement.[12] The Akal Takht, the governing religious body of Sikhism, considers the killings to be a genocide.[13]\

In 2011, Human Rights Watch reported the Government of India had "yet to prosecute those responsible for the mass killings".[14] 

The 2011 WikiLeaks cable leaks revealed that the United States was convinced about the complicity of the Indian government ruled by the Indian National Congress in the riots, and termed it as "opportunism" and "hatred" of the Congress government against Sikhs.[15][16] 

The United States has refused to recognize the riots as genocide, but do acknowledge that "grave human rights violations" did take place.[17] 

Also in 2011, a new set of mass graves were discovered in Haryana, and Human Rights Watch reported that "Widespread anti-Sikh attacks in Haryana were part of broader revenge attacks" in India.[18]

On 31 October, the crowd around the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, began shouting for vengeance with slogans such as "Blood for blood!" and turned into an unruly mob. At 17:20, President Zail Singh arrived at the hospital and the mob outside stoned his car. The mob began assaulting Sikhs by stopping cars and buses to pull Sikhs out of them and burn their turbans.[34] The violence on 31 October was restricted to the area around the AIIMS and did result in many Sikh deaths.[34] People in other parts of Delhi reported their neighbourhoods were peaceful.

Throughout the night of 31 October and morning of 1 November, Congress leaders met with local supporters to distribute money and weapons. Congress party MP Sajjan Kumar and Trade Union leader Lalit Maken handed out 100 rupee notes and bottles of liquor to assailants.[34] On the morning of 1 November, Sajjan Kumar was seen holding rallies in, at least, the following Delhi neighbourhoods; in Palam Colony from 06:30 to 07:00, in Kiran Gardens from 08:00 to 08:30, and in Sultanpuri from around 08:30 to 09:00.[34] In Kiran Gardens at 8:00 AM, Sajjan Kumar was seen distributing iron rods from a parked truck to a group of 120 people and instructing them to "attack Sikhs, kill them, and loot and burn their properties".[34] At an undefined time in the morning of 1 November, Sajjan Kumar led a mob of people along the Palam Railway main road to the Mangolpuri neighbourhood where the crowd answered his calls with chants of "Kill the Sardars" and "Indira Gandhi is our mother and these people have killed her".[35] In Sultanpuri, Moti Singh, a Sikh who had served in the Congress party for 20 years heard Sajjan Kumar give the following speech:

Whoever kills the sons of the snakes, I will reward them. Whoever kills Roshan Singh and Bagh Singh will get 5,000 rupees each and 1,000 rupees each for killing any other Sikhs. You can collect these prizes on November 3 from my personal assistant Jai Chand Jamadar.[note 1]

The CBI recently told the court that during the riot Sajjan Kumar had said that "not a single Sikh should survive".[7][37] It also said that Delhi police kept its "eyes closed" during the riot as it was pre-planned.[7]

In the neighbourhood of Shakarpur, Congress (I) leader Shyam Tyagi's home was used as a meeting place for an undefined number of people.[36] H. K. L. Bhagat, the Minister of Information and Broadcasting distributed money to Boop Tyagi, Shyam Tyagi's brother, and ordered him to “Keep these two thousand rupees for liquor and do as I have told you.... You need not worry at all. I will look after everything.”[36]

During the night of 31 October, Balwan Khokhar, a local Congress (I) party leader who was later implicated in the ensuing massacre, held a meeting at the Ration Shop of Pandit Harkesh in the Palam Colony.[36] At 08:30 on 1 November, Shankar Lal Sharma, an active Congress party supporter, held a meeting at his shop where he formed a mob and had the people swear to kill Sikhs.[36]

The chief weapon used by the mobs, kerosene was supplied by a group of Congress Party leaders who owned filling stations.[38] In Sultanpuri, Brahmanand Gupta, the president of the A-4 block Congress Party distributed oil while Congress Party MP Sajjan Kumar "instructed the crowd to kill Sikhs, and to loot and burn their properties" as he had in other meetings throughout New Delhi.[38] 

In much the same way, meetings were held in places like Cooperative Colony in Bokaro where P.K. Tripathi, president of the local Congress Party and owner of a gas station in Nara More, provided kerosene to mobs.[38] Aseem Shrivastava, a Masters student at the Delhi School of Economics described the organised nature of the mobs in an affidavit submitted to the Misra Commission:

The attack on Sikhs and their property in our locality appeared to be an extremely organized affair...There were also some young men on motorcycles, who were instructing the mobs and supplying them with kerosene oil from time to time. On more than a few occasions we saw auto-rickshaw arriving with several tins of kerosene oil and other inflammable material such as jute-sacks.[39]

A senior official at the Ministry of Home Affairs informed journalist Ivan Fera, that an arson investigation of several businesses burned in the riots had uncovered an unnamed combustible chemical "whose provision required large-scale coordination".[40] Eyewitness reports confirmed the use of a combustible chemical besides kerosene.[40] The Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee later identified 70 affidavits which cited the use of a highly flammable chemical in its written arguments before the Misra Commission.[38]

Use of voter lists by the Congress Party

On 31 October, Congress party officials provided assailants with voter lists, school registration forms, and ration lists.[41] The lists were used to find the location of Sikh homes and business, an otherwise impossible task because they were located in unmarked and diverse neighbourhoods. On the night of 31 October, the night before the massacres began, assailants used the lists to mark the houses of Sikhs with letter "S".[41] In addition, because most of the mobs were illiterate, Congress Party officials provided help in reading the lists and leading the mobs to Sikh homes and businesses in the other neighbourhoods.[38] By using the lists the mobs were able to pinpoint the locations of Sikhs they otherwise would have missed.[38]

Sikh men not in their homes were easily identified by their distinctive turban and beard while Sikh women were identified by their dress. In some cases, the mobs returned to locations where they knew Sikhs were hiding after consulting their lists. One man, Amar Singh, escaped the initial attack on his house by having a Hindu neighbour drag him into his neighbour's house and declare him dead. 

However, a group of 18 assailants later came looking for his body, and when his neighbour replied that others had already taken away the body an assailant showed him a list and replied, "Look, Amar Singh's name has not been struck off from the list so his dead body has not been taken away."