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Council of
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Dr. Aulakh Receives International Peace Award
WASHINGTON,
D.C., September 20, 2006 - Dr. Gurmit Singh Aulakh, President of the
Council of Khalistan, received the International Peace Prize Award on August
27 from Dal Khalsa of America, headed by Sardar Paramjit Singh Sekhon. The award
was presented at a ceremony at the Fremont Gurdwara in Fremont, California.
He was nominated for this prestigious award by Dr. Awatar Singh Sekhon, Managing
Editor of the International Journal of Sikh Affairs. According to a Dal Khalsa
USA press release, he was given the award "for his tireless service to
preserve peace in South Asia in particular and the world in general." The
release cites Dr. Aulakh for "continuing the Sikhs' struggle to regain
their lost sovereignty, independence, and political power, by peaceful means."
The
award was presented for Dr. Aulakh's continuing efforts to internationalize
the peaceful, democratic, nonviolent Sikh struggle for independence and the
human rights violations against the Sikhs in India. He has been a tireless worker
for the cause of Sikh freedom. Dr. Aulakh has raised awareness of the massive
human-rights violations in India.
The Indian government has murdered over 250,000 Sikh infants, children, youth,
men, women, and elderly since 1984, more than 300,000 Christians in Nagaland,
over 90,000 Muslims in Kashmir, tens of thousands of Christians and Muslims
throughout the country, and tens of thousands of Assamese, Bodos, Dalits, Manipuris,
Tamils, and others.
Indian police arrested human-rights activist Jaswant Singh Khalra after he exposed their policy of mass cremation of Sikhs, in which over 50,000 Sikhs have been arrested, tortured, and murdered, then their bodies were declared unidentified and secretly cremated. Khalra was murdered in police custody. His body was not given to his family. No one has been brought to justice for the kidnapping and murder of Jaswant Singh Khalra. The police never released the body of former Jathedar of the Akal Takht Gurdev Singh Kaunke after SSP Swaran Singh Ghotna murdered him. He has never been tried for the Jathedar Kaunke murder. In 1994, the U.S. State Department reported that the Indian government had paid over 41,000 cash bounties for killing Sikhs. A report by the Movement Against State Repression (MASR) quotes the Punjab Civil Magistracy as writing "if we add up the figures of the last few years the number of innocent persons killed would run into lakhs [hundreds of thousands.]" The Indian Supreme Court called the Indian government's murders of Sikhs "worse than a genocide."
The MASR report states that 52,268 Sikhs are being held as political prisoners in India without charge or trial, mostly under a repressive law known as the "Terrorist and Disruptive Activities Act" (TADA), which expired in 1995. Many have been in illegal custody since 1984! There has been no list published of those who were acquitted under TADA and those who are still rotting in Indian jails. Tens of thousands of other minorities are also being held as political prisoners, according to Amnesty International. "We demand the immediate release of all these political prisoners," said Dr. Aulakh. "Why are there political prisoners in a democracy?"
Missionary Graham Staines was murdered along with his two sons, ages 8 and 10, by a mob of militant, fundamentalist Hindu nationalists who set fire to the jeep, surrounded it, and chanted "Victory to Hannuman," a Hindu god. Missionary Joseph Cooper was beaten so badly that he had to spend a week in an Indian hospital. Then the Indian government threw him out of the country. None of the people involved has been tried. The persons who have murdered priests, raped nuns, and burned Christian churches have not been charged or tried. Police broke up a Christian religious festival with gunfire.
The murderers of 2,000 to 5,000 Muslims in Gujarat have never been brought to trial. An Indian newspaper reported that the police were ordered not to get involved in that massacre, a frightening parallel to the Delhi massacre of Sikhs in 1984.
"Sikhs and other minorities cannot live under Indian rule," said Dr. Aulakh. "The actions of the Indian government have made it clear that there is no place for Sikhs or other minorities such as Christians, Muslims, Dalits, and others in India's Hindu theocracy," he said. Dr. Aulakh took note of the charges filed against 35 Sikhs for making speeches and raising the Khalistani flag. "Clearly India is scared of the peaceful, democratic, nonviolent movement for freedom inside and outside Punjab, Khalistan," he said.
History shows that multinational states such as India are doomed to failure. Countries like Austria-Hungary, India's longtime friend the Soviet Union, Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, and others prove this point. India is not one country; it is a polyglot like those countries, thrown together for the convenience of the British colonialists. It is doomed to break up as they did. Currently, there are 17 freedom movements within India's borders. It has 18 official languages.
"Only a sovereign, independent Khalistan will end the repression and raise the standard of living for the people of Punjab, said Dr. Gurmit Aulakh. "As Professor Darshan Singh, former Jathedar of the Akal Takht, said, 'If a Sikh is not a Khalistani, he Is not a Sikh.'," Dr. Aulakh said. "We must free Khalistan now."
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