Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
India

Operation Blue Star: UK Claims Release Of Secret 1980s Files May Prejudice Ties With India

IANS, 09 Mar, 2018 02:26 PM
    The UK authorities have also linked the classified information in the documents with wider national security concerns and claimed that extracting any portions of it to make public would cross the cabinet office's red lines.
     
     
    The UK authorities on Thursday said the release of classified documents dating back to the period of Operation Blue Star in 1984 could prejudice international relations with India due to the political sensitivity of the subject.
     
     
    As a hearing seeking the declassification of files that are believed to contain information on Britain's involvement in the Indian military operation at Golden Temple in Amritsar concluded in London today, the counsel for the cabinet office said India attaches particular sensitivity to the issue of "Sikh separatism", which is perceived as a threat to the very existence of the Indian state.
     
     
    "Just the passage of time does not diminish the significance of this case, said the counsel for the Cabinet Office.
     
     
    The UK authorities have also linked the classified information in the documents with wider national security concerns and claimed that extracting any portions of it to make public would cross the cabinet office's red lines.
     
     
    The UK Information Commissioner s Office (ICO), another party in the hearing, questioned the impact on UK-India relations with the release of the documents saying India is a country governed by the rule of law, with a "sophisticated democracy" and there should be no reason to presume that it would not respect the UK's need to follow the rule of law.
     
     
    As part of her closing submissions, UK-based freelance journalist Phil Miller's counsel arguing in favour of the files being made public as part of a Freedom of Information (FOI) stressed on wide public interest in the case and concluded that it was not simply about seeking a "smoking gun" in terms of UK-India bilateral relations in the 1980s.
     
     
    "The documents may well allay concerns and help reassure the Sikh community. So there could be good news in no bad news, said Mr Miller's counsel.
     
     
     
     
    The judge at the first tier tribunal hearing, Murray Shanks, reserved judgment in the case, which is expected later this year.
     
     
    Mr Miller's FOI request revolves around the need to establish if trade and arms deals were a factor in the assistance offered to India by the then Margaret Thatcher led government.
     
     
    He also believes that as the then ruling Congress party is no longer in charge, the present BJP-led government in India would welcome the release of the files in the interests of transparency.
     
     
    During his evidence in open session, Owen Jenkins, former FCO Director for South Asia and Afghanistan, had revealed that there had been no consultation with the Indian government on the issue of the release of the classified files in question.
     
     
    Indian High Commission sources said the matter was for the British government to decide on and that the Indian government did not have a stand for or against the declassification of the files.
     
     
    This remains a highly sensitive issue and release of the information could have a detrimental effect on our relationship with India, said Jenkins, who gave much of his evidence in closed session due to the sensitivity of the material which they said could cause risk of damage to international relations.
     
     
    Mr Miller had come across information that British military advice was given to Indian forces prior to Operation Blue Star during unrelated research in the UK's National Archives in 2014.
     
     
    The then British Prime Minister, David Cameron, had immediately ordered a review into this discovery, which led to a statement in Parliament declaring that Britain s role had been purely advisory and the Special Air Service (SAS) advice had limited impact on the military operation at the Sikh holy shrine in June 1984.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    New Democrat Leader John Horgan Looking Forward To B.C. Election Results

    New Democrat Leader John Horgan Looking Forward To B.C. Election Results
    VANCOUVER — NDP Leader John Horgan says he's been crisscrossing the province speaking to voters and thinks British Columbia can't afford another four years of a Liberal government.

    New Democrat Leader John Horgan Looking Forward To B.C. Election Results

    Woman's Naked Body Found In Delhi's Tilak Nagar

    Woman's Naked Body Found In Delhi's Tilak Nagar
    The naked body of a 38-year-old woman was found in her flat in west Delhi's Tilak Nagar, police said.

    Woman's Naked Body Found In Delhi's Tilak Nagar

    Sukhbir Badal Calls For Immediate Action On Akali Workers Death

    Sukhbir Badal Calls For Immediate Action On Akali Workers Death
    Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) president Sukhbir Singh Badal called for immediate action against those involved in the murder of two members of an Akali family at Rukan Shah Wala village Ferozepur on May 2.

    Sukhbir Badal Calls For Immediate Action On Akali Workers Death

    South Asia Satellite GSLV-F09, 'India's GIFT' To Neighbours, Launched, Modi Says 'Historic Occasion'

    South Asia Satellite GSLV-F09, 'India's GIFT' To Neighbours, Launched, Modi Says 'Historic Occasion'
    GSAT-9, considered as a ‘gift’ to its South Asian neighbours, is all set to ride piggyback on the ISRO rocket GSLV-F09 with indigenous Cryogenic Upper Stage.

    South Asia Satellite GSLV-F09, 'India's GIFT' To Neighbours, Launched, Modi Says 'Historic Occasion'

    Indian Supreme Court Confirms Death For ‘Brutal' Nirbhaya Rapists

    Indian Supreme Court Confirms Death For ‘Brutal' Nirbhaya Rapists
    "If ever a case called for hanging, this was it," said a bench of Justice Dipak Misra, Justice Ashok Bhushan and Justice R. Banumathi

    Indian Supreme Court Confirms Death For ‘Brutal' Nirbhaya Rapists

    Watch: Women IPS Officers Come Out Against 'Demeaning' Film Dialogues, Song Lyrics

    Watch: Women IPS Officers Come Out Against 'Demeaning' Film Dialogues, Song Lyrics
    Three women IPS officers from Tamil Nadu have voiced concern over portrayal of women in a demeaning manner in movies and said this was a major factor in rising crimes against the fairer sex.

    Watch: Women IPS Officers Come Out Against 'Demeaning' Film Dialogues, Song Lyrics