Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
India

Eight years after sacrilege, Sukhbir Badal apologises for failing to arrest culprits

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Dec, 2023 03:25 PM
  • Eight years after sacrilege, Sukhbir Badal apologises for failing to arrest culprits

Chandigarh, Dec 14 (IANS) Eight years after the sacrilege of Guru Granth Sahib during the helm of the Shiromani Akali Dal-BJP government in Punjab, Akali Dal President Sukhbir Badal on Thursday unconditionally sought forgiveness of the Khalsa Panth (community) for failing to arrest the culprits.

Speaking at the 103rd foundation day of the Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) with folded hands, Badal expressed his regrets.

"As the President of the party, I want to offer my sincere apology to the Akal Takht Sahib and the Sikh community.

"I deeply regret any hurt caused during our governance. The sacrilege incidents that occurred were regrettable, and it’s a sentiment shared by the public that our government was seen as Panthic. I apologise that we couldn’t apprehend and punish the culprits during the brief remaining part of our tenure.

"I am very sad that we couldn’t understand and defeat the conspiracies of some so-called Panthic individuals and organisations and allowed them to compel us to handover the probe to the CBI. These incidents remain the most painful events in my life and the life of Parkash Singh Badal."

The Special Investigation Team (SIT), probing cases of sacrilege and police firing in 2015, in February this year filed a charge sheet in a Faridkot court indicting Sukhbir Badal and former DGP Sumedh Singh Saini as masterminds.

The chargesheet also blamed then Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal for the Kotkapura firing case following sacrilege of Guru Granth Sahib and subsequent violence in which the police force was accused of excesses that left two people dead.

In Punjab, blasphemy has been an emotive issue in every election since the 2015 Kotkapura firing case.

Sikh intellectuals, social reformers and even political parties prefer to maintain a stoical silence over lynching incidents after blasphemy or 'Beadbi'. They largely blame political parties at the helm for inaction in delivering speedy justice in sacrilege cases, saying the people of a particular religion was forced to take the law into their own hands.

Justice Ranjit Singh (retd), who headed the commission appointed by the previous Congress government into the alleged incidents of sacrilege, had placed the then Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal and then DGP Saini in dock.

Also, he had castigated the Sirsa-based Dera Sacha Sauda, whose chief and self-styled godman Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh is currently serving a 20-year jail sentence for raping two of his disciples and a life term for a journalist's killing, for the incident of sacrilege.

Justice Singh made these comments in January last year on the release of his 423-page book "The Sacrilege" based on his inquiry when he was heading the government set up commission.

MORE India ARTICLES

Plastic bags found inside body of Delhi girl, says family

Plastic bags found inside body of Delhi girl, says family
Family members of a 15-year-old girl, who died two days after getting operated at a Delhi hospital, have alleged that her organs had been removed by hospital authorities. The family alleged that after an operation of appendicitis at a hospital, in which she died, plastic bags, used for collecting urine, were found in her stomach area.

Plastic bags found inside body of Delhi girl, says family

Journalist Angad Singh blacklisted, Centre tells Delhi HC

Journalist Angad Singh blacklisted, Centre tells Delhi HC
Appearing for the Centre, advocate Anurag Ahluwalia told the court that as Singh has violated Section 11A of the Foreigners Order, 1948, which prohibits a foreigner from producing any picture, film or documentary without permission in writing from the Centre, he is a blacklisted subject.

Journalist Angad Singh blacklisted, Centre tells Delhi HC

AI urination case: Delhi court adjourns hearing in Shankar Mishra's bail plea

AI urination case: Delhi court adjourns hearing in Shankar Mishra's bail plea
On January 13, Mishra told the court that he was not the accused. "There must be someone else who peed or it must be her who urinated," he had said. He further claimed that the woman was suffering from some prostate-related disease.

AI urination case: Delhi court adjourns hearing in Shankar Mishra's bail plea

Students are taking my test and I enjoy it: PM Modi

Students are taking my test and I enjoy it: PM Modi
Modi said that it was perhaps the first time where Pariksha Pe Charcha was being held in such cold weather, since it is usually held in February. The PM said that the students can learn time management by observing the working style of their mothers and advised them to utilise their time properly for studies.

Students are taking my test and I enjoy it: PM Modi

India could emerge as major power next year

India could emerge as major power next year
It has one of the fastest-growing major economies -- certainly among comparably developed and similarly sized economies. It must now be included with nations that influence the global system, the report said.

India could emerge as major power next year

Punjab, Delhi CMs dedicate 400 more Aam Aadmi Clinics

Punjab, Delhi CMs dedicate 400 more Aam Aadmi Clinics
Addressing the gathering after dedicating 500th Aam Aadmi Clinic at a function here, the Chief Minister, accompanied by Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal, said the government has already set the wheels in motion for this noble cause.

Punjab, Delhi CMs dedicate 400 more Aam Aadmi Clinics