Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

Air India Bombing Probe Is 'Active And Ongoing': RCMP

The Canadian Press, 23 Jun, 2015 10:32 AM
    OTTAWA -- Three decades on, the RCMP says its investigation into the Air India bombing -- the worst terrorist act in Canadian history -- remains "active and ongoing."
     
    On June 23, 1985, an explosion ripped apart Air India Flight 182 en route to New Delhi, killing all 329 people aboard, most of them Canadians of Indian descent.
     
    Authorities believe Sikh extremists fighting for an independent homeland sabotaged the Boeing 747, which crashed into the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Ireland.
     
    A federal commission of inquiry would conclude that a "cascading series of errors" by police, intelligence officers and air safety regulators allowed the attack to take place.
     
    The complex investigation of the crime was hampered by difficulty raising the wreckage from the ocean floor, agency turf wars and challenges persuading witnesses to come forward.
     
     
    Talwinder Singh Parmar, a prime suspect, died in 1992. In 2003, Inderjit Singh Reyat pleaded guilty to manslaughter. Two years later a British Columbia judge found Ajaib Singh Bagri and Ripudaman Singh Malik not guilty.
    But police have not closed the file.
     
    A "dedicated team" of Mounties continues to probe the attack on the jetliner and a related explosion at Tokyo's Narita airport, said Sgt. Annie Linteau, an RCMP spokeswoman.
     
    "Over the last 30 years, the Air India investigation is the longest and certainly one of the most complex domestic terrorism investigations that the RCMP has undertaken in the history of the Canadian judiciary," Linteau told The Canadian Press.
     
    "We have continuously worked with various international police agencies in Europe, Asia and North America, who have been extremely co-operative."
     
     
    The Mounties rarely discuss ongoing investigations, and Linteau declined to provide additional details.
     
    Bal Gupta of the Air India Victims Families Association said he had not heard from the RCMP in more than a year.
     
    "I don't know anything about progress," said Gupta, who lost his wife in the bombing.
     
    "In principle, any murder file is not closed unless the culprits are sentenced."
     
    Gupta plans to attend an Air India memorial in Toronto on Tuesday, while his son Susheel will be at one in Ottawa. Other ceremonies will take place in Montreal and Vancouver.
     
     
    Justice Minister Peter MacKay joined community members and families of victims early Tuesday at a ceremony in the community of Ahakista on Ireland's southwest coast.
     
    "For families, we do remember our near and dear ones every of our lives, and on June 23 it becomes even more acute," said Bal Gupta.
     
    Susheel regrets that his two young children will not meet their grandmother. "They say time heals wounds. I don't know if it does."
     
    The federal inquiry into the bombing, led by former Supreme Court justice John Major, said in 2010 that fundamental changes to intelligence handling, criminal prosecutions and aviation security were needed to prevent another deadly attack in the skies.
     
    The Conservative government has enacted some recommendations and it continues to work on others.
    Susheel Gupta applauded the government's investment of $10 million in the Kanishka Project, which has funded research into terrorism.
     
     
    "I think things are better than they were 30 years ago, and I just hope that things will continue to improve."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Lying G20 Officer Who Choked, Arrested Compliant Man Demoted To Constable

    Lying G20 Officer Who Choked, Arrested Compliant Man Demoted To Constable
    TORONTO — A police sergeant who choked a compliant man he arrested illegally at the G20 summit five years ago and then lied about it was handed a two-month demotion to constable Friday.

    Lying G20 Officer Who Choked, Arrested Compliant Man Demoted To Constable

    Justin Levasseur Charged With Second-Degree Murder Of 79-Year-Old Charan Dhandwar In New Westminster

    Justin Levasseur Charged With Second-Degree Murder Of 79-Year-Old Charan Dhandwar In New Westminster
    A 23-year-old man has been charged with second-degree murder in the attack of an elderly woman while she was out for a walk in New Westminster, B.C.

    Justin Levasseur Charged With Second-Degree Murder Of 79-Year-Old Charan Dhandwar In New Westminster

    Police Call For Witnesses To Sea-to-Sky Highway Crash That Killed Cyclists, Passenger

    Police Call For Witnesses To Sea-to-Sky Highway Crash That Killed Cyclists, Passenger
    RCMP are appealing to the occupants of a dark or black SUV who may have witnessed an erratic driver on the Sea-to-Sky Highway near Lillooet, B.C., before three people were killed in a crash.

    Police Call For Witnesses To Sea-to-Sky Highway Crash That Killed Cyclists, Passenger

    RCMP Officer Bill Bentley's Acquittal On Perjury Allegations Upheld By B.C. Appeal Court

    RCMP Officer Bill Bentley's Acquittal On Perjury Allegations Upheld By B.C. Appeal Court
    Const. Bill Bentley was among four officers who confronted Dziekanski at Vancouver's airport in October 2007, when he was stunned with a Taser and died.

    RCMP Officer Bill Bentley's Acquittal On Perjury Allegations Upheld By B.C. Appeal Court

    Surrey-Delta Shootings: Two More Arrested, Drugs Seized In Ongoing Gang Dispute

    Surrey-Delta Shootings: Two More Arrested, Drugs Seized In Ongoing Gang Dispute
    More than 30 shootings believed to be related to a clash between two drug gangs have rocked Surrey and Delta in recent months.

    Surrey-Delta Shootings: Two More Arrested, Drugs Seized In Ongoing Gang Dispute

    Russell Atma Bidesi Found Guilty Of Manslaughter In Surrey Shooting Death During Home Invasion

    Russell Atma Bidesi Found Guilty Of Manslaughter In Surrey Shooting Death During Home Invasion
    Kacey Rogers and his girlfriend were preparing to head to bed the evening of Feb. 26, 2012, when four shotgun blasts ripped through the front door of their north Surrey home.

    Russell Atma Bidesi Found Guilty Of Manslaughter In Surrey Shooting Death During Home Invasion