Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Parole Board Says Air India Trial Perjurer Inderjit Singh Reyat Can't Take Part In Political Matters

The Canadian Press, 18 Mar, 2016 09:53 AM
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia man convicted in the Air India bombing deaths of 331 people has been denied his request to participate in political matters.
     
    "Your associations with others of a similar mindset were directly risk-related and led to the murders of many innocent people," the Parole Board of Canada said in a ruling against Inderjit Singh Reyat.
     
    The board said in its decision released Thursday that it considered comments by Reyat's lawyer about his client's rights under the charter to participate in political issues.
     
    Reyat became eligible for statutory release in January after serving two-thirds of his nine-year sentence for perjury for lying at the trial of two other men charged in Canada's worst mass murder 30 years ago.
     
     
    The board also imposed a second condition for Reyat not to associate with anyone involved in political or criminal activity or extremist views.
     
    Patrick Storey, regional spokesman for the parole board, said Reyat could consider the condition for him not to get politically involved as being too broad.
     
    "That could be construed, I suppose, as not to associate with anyone involved in political activity, which means he couldn't talk to his municipal councillor or an MP or a (member of the legislature) as any Canadian citizen would be able to do."
     
    Storey said the conditions will be in place for the duration of Reyat's statutory release and that he could appeal the decision or take his case to the Federal Court if a new review is not ordered.
     
    The Crown said the terrorist attack against state-owned Air India was prompted by British Columbia-based Sikh extremists' revenge against the Indian government for ordering the army to raid Sikhism's holiest shrine, the Golden Temple in Amritsar in June 1984.
     
    Two baggage handlers were killed at Tokyo's Narita airport on June 23, 1985, when a suitcase exploded before it was loaded onto an Air India plane. That was the same day another suitcase bomb aboard an Air India plane exploded off the coast of Ireland, killing 329 people.
     
     
    The Crown maintained the bomb-laden suitcases were loaded onto flights at Vancouver International Airport before one suitcase was transferred to an Air India plane in Toronto then headed to Montreal to pick up more passengers on its way to Delhi via London.
     
    Reyat had previously pleaded guilty to reduced charges of helping to make the bombs at his home in Duncan, B.C., and spent five years in prison.
     
    Ripudaman Singh Malik and Ajiab Singh Bagri were both acquitted of mass murder and conspiracy in March 2005.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    My Son On Life Support After Wisdom Tooth Removal Procedure: Manitoba Mom

    My Son On Life Support After Wisdom Tooth Removal Procedure: Manitoba Mom
    Angela Steele says Mason Woods had a wisdom tooth extracted on Feb. 27 and he was pleased that surgery went well.

    My Son On Life Support After Wisdom Tooth Removal Procedure: Manitoba Mom

    Calgary Doctor Says Toddler With Meningitis Had No Chance Of Survival

    Calgary Doctor Says Toddler With Meningitis Had No Chance Of Survival
    Dr. Shauna Burkholder testified Monday at the negligence trial of the boy's parents, David and Collet Stephan.

    Calgary Doctor Says Toddler With Meningitis Had No Chance Of Survival

    Young Woman Died After She No Longer Received Government Care: B.C. Youth Rep

    Young Woman Died After She No Longer Received Government Care: B.C. Youth Rep
    Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond says the woman was trying to navigate the system of youth support after she was no longer involved with the Children's Ministry.

    Young Woman Died After She No Longer Received Government Care: B.C. Youth Rep

    Kelowna Man Arrested, Facing Charge For Allegedly Beating Elderly Mother

    Kelowna Man Arrested, Facing Charge For Allegedly Beating Elderly Mother
    RCMP say a 61-year-old man called 911 around 11 p.m. Thursday to report being assaulted but when officers arrived, they found an 81-year-old woman suffering from significant head trauma, five broken ribs and bruising all over her body.

    Kelowna Man Arrested, Facing Charge For Allegedly Beating Elderly Mother

    Woman Faces Criminal Charges After Chase Ends On Prince George, B.C., Ice Floe

    Woman Faces Criminal Charges After Chase Ends On Prince George, B.C., Ice Floe
    Twenty-five-year-old Philicity Lafreniere of Prince George faces five criminal charges

    Woman Faces Criminal Charges After Chase Ends On Prince George, B.C., Ice Floe

    In Thunder Bay, Comfort Of A Warm Meal Helps To Ease The Sting Of Homelessness

    In Thunder Bay, Comfort Of A Warm Meal Helps To Ease The Sting Of Homelessness
    The 19-year-old looks over at the source of the sound, just like the dozens of others in the cafeteria of Thunder Bay's largest homeless shelter

    In Thunder Bay, Comfort Of A Warm Meal Helps To Ease The Sting Of Homelessness