Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
India

Chasing Jagtar Singh Tara: How Mastermind Of Punjab CM Beant Singh's Assassination Was Caught

Darpan News Desk IANS, 29 Nov, 2015 02:35 PM
    Former Delhi Police chief Neeraj Kumar says that nabbing the mastermind of Punjab chief minister Sardar Beant Singh's assassination was the most dangerous operation he ever undertook.
     
    But as luck would have it, when mastermind Jagtar Singh Tara was tracked to a hideout in south Delhi, he was unarmed -- save a cyanide capsule that was hidden in his turban.
     
    "We were half expecting the men inside to be sitting with Kalashnikov rifles, ready to fire. Instead, to our surprise and relief, we found a tall turbaned Sikh youngster sprawled leisurely in an executive chair," Kumar told IANS in an interview.
     
     
    "Another Sikh, but without a turban, was also seated there, in a relaxed mode. We overpowered them in no time."
     
    The man in turban admitted that he was indeed Tara. This was in September 1995, barely weeks after Beant Singh's assassination in Chandigarh by a suicide bomber shocked the nation.
     
    Beant Singh became chief minister at a time when the Khalistan campaign was at its bloody peak in Punjab. Soon after he took charge of the state, security forces ended the decade-long saga of violence.
     
    Kumar -- then with the Central Bureau of Investigation -- recalled those terse moments in an interview with IANS. "Jagtar Singh Tara's arrest was one of the most risky operations I did."
     
     
    Beant Singh, the chief minister from 1992 to 1995, was killed by the Babbar Khalsa International (BKI) in a deadly suicide attack on August 31, 1995. Seventeen others were also killed.
     
    Beant Singh had come down from his second floor office around 5.10 p.m. When he was about to get into his car in the VIP porch, the suicide bomber dressed in police uniform, Dilawar Singh, blew himself up.
     
    Explaining the risky factors of the operation to catch Tara, Kumar said: "Tara was reported to be armed. He also had cyanide pill. We were unarmed and were four in number."
     
    A deputy inspector general in the CBI then, Kumar knew that taking on Tara was a dangerous affair. 
     
     
    "My decision to come to this point without a commando unit, without weapons and bullet proof jackets, without cordoning off the entire area, without taking some local residents into confidence, could all backfire, literally, within a matter of seconds.
     
    "All our combined heroism could blow up on our face," Kumar said. 
     
    Assisting Kumar were Assistant Sub-Inspector Anchal Singh, constables Dharambir Singh and Surinder Singh.
     
    They suddenly barged into a shop in a small single-storey municipal market in Safdarjung Enclave in south Delhi. 
     
    That's where they found their prey. "Fortunately, there was no weapon on either of the two men."
     
     
    Kumar's book 'Dial D for Don', which is basically about the Indian underworld after the 1993 serial bombings in Mumbai that was blamed on the still fugitive mobster Dawood Ibrahim or "D Company", also has a detailed description about the arrest of Tara. 

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Can't Frame Rules For Transgenders In UPSC Exams, Centre Tells Delhi High Court

    Can't Frame Rules For Transgenders In UPSC Exams, Centre Tells Delhi High Court
    The central government told the Delhi High Court on Wednesday that rules for including transgenders in the UPSC examinations cannot be framed as the Supreme Court has not clarified the definition of a 'transgender'.

    Can't Frame Rules For Transgenders In UPSC Exams, Centre Tells Delhi High Court

    Centre Raises Minimum Support Prices For Pulses, Cotton In India

    Centre Raises Minimum Support Prices For Pulses, Cotton In India
    The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs on Wednesday increased the Minimum Support Price (MSP) of crops ranging from Rs.15 to Rs.275 for this year's kharif season.

    Centre Raises Minimum Support Prices For Pulses, Cotton In India

    Arun Jaitley Backs Sushma In Lalit Modi Row, Vasundhara's Name Crops Up

    Arun Jaitley Backs Sushma In Lalit Modi Row, Vasundhara's Name Crops Up
    External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj on Tuesday got strong backing from her colleague, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, who termed "baseless" all allegations against her in the Lalit Modi issue. 

    Arun Jaitley Backs Sushma In Lalit Modi Row, Vasundhara's Name Crops Up

    Why Continued Silence On Lalit Modi Issue, Congress Asks Modi

    Why Continued Silence On Lalit Modi Issue, Congress Asks Modi
    The Congress on Tuesday questioned Prime Minister Narendra Modi's "continued silence" on the Lalit Modi issue, saying there cannot be different set of rules for UPA and BJP ministers.

    Why Continued Silence On Lalit Modi Issue, Congress Asks Modi

    Detergent In Mother Dairy Milk? Company Refutes Allegation

    Detergent In Mother Dairy Milk? Company Refutes Allegation
    Two samples of milk produced by Mother Dairy have been found to be substandard, and one of them contained detergent, a food watchdog official said on Tuesday.

    Detergent In Mother Dairy Milk? Company Refutes Allegation

    Vasundhara Raje's Name Now Figures In Lalit Modi Row

    Vasundhara Raje's Name Now Figures In Lalit Modi Row
    Adding a new twist to the Lalit Modi controversy, the name of Rajasthan Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje cropped up on Tuesday with allegations that she testified in favour of the former IPL chief's British immigration application in 2011.

    Vasundhara Raje's Name Now Figures In Lalit Modi Row