[Congressional Record Volume 152, Number 101 (Thursday, July 27, 2006)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E1556]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
DR. AULAKH, PRESIDENT OF COUNCIL OF KHALISTAN, MAKES PRESENTATION AT
LONDON INSTITUTE OF SOUTH ASIA
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HON. EDOLPHUS TOWNS
of new york
in the house of representatives
Thursday, July 27, 2006
Mr. TOWNS. Mr. Speaker, recently the London Institute of South Asia
held an event to honor author Professor Gurtej Singh, who has a
significant book on the repression in India. In connection with that,
they held a seminar on the topic of a separate electorate in India for
minorities. Dr. Gunnit Singh Aulakh, President of the Council of
Khalistan, spoke at the Institute in connection with the seminar. He
spoke about the struggle to liberate Khalistan, the Sikh homeland. As
you know, Mr. Speaker, Khalistan declared its independence on October
7, 1987. Yet Indian repression of the Sikh Nation continues to this
day.
Dr. Aulakh spoke out against a separate electorate within India for
the Sikhs, arguing that only full independence will allow the Sikhs to
live in peace, prosperity, dignity, and freedom. He said that
independence for Khalistan is inevitable, noting the recent marches,
seminars, and other events showing the rising tide of support for
freedom for Khalistan. And the politicians in Punjab have noticed and
are beginning to speak out for Khalistan. That is a good sign. Even the
Congress Party government of Punjab explicitly asserted the sovereignty
of Punjab when it cancelled the agreements allowing the transfer of
Punjabi water to non-riparian states last year.
He reported on the repression of the Sikhs that continues to show up
in the form of the Indian Government destroying Sikh farms with
bulldozers, farms that Sikh farmers had worked their lives for, only to
see a lifetime of work destroyed by the Indian regime. This repression
takes the form of arresting people for raising the flag of Khalistan,
even though the Indian courts have ruled that wearing the saffron of
Khalistan or raising a flag is not a crime. But the Indian Government
apparently believes that it is not bound by the law, a position held
not by democratic, but totalitarian governments. As my friend from
California has said, for minorities, ``India may as well be Nazi
Germany.''
Mr. Speaker, we cannot sit idly by and let this repression continue.
I know that there are many pressing problems on the world stage that
require our attention, such as the situation in Lebanon and the
continuing fight against terrorism in Iraq and Afghanistan. But we must
not let the necessity of attention and action in these important
situations allow us to let Indian repression slip under the radar. It
is our duty to the principles on which this country was founded to
support freedom everywhere in the world, not just in the hot spots. It
is time to take action, Mr. Speaker. America should cut off aid and
trade with India until all people there are allowed to live in freedom.
And we should support real democracy, the kind India claims to believe
in, in the form of a free and fair plebiscite in Punjab, Khalistan, in
Nagalim, in Kashmir, and wherever people seek their freedom in South
Asia.
Mr. Speaker, I would like to place the Council of Khalistan's press
release on Dr. Aulakh's visit to the London Institute of South Asia
into the Record at this time.
Dr. Aulakh Speaks to London Institute of South Asia--Book Award to
Professor Gurtej Singh
Washington, D.C., July 12, 2006.--Dr. Gurmit Singh Aulakh,
President of the Council of Khalistan, spoke last month at
the London Institute of South Asia (LISA.) He went there for
a ceremony honoring Professor Gurtej Singh IAS for his book,
Tandev of the Centaur, which won the LISA Book Award. The
seminar addressed the topic of a separate electorate for
Indian. minorities. Dr. Aulakh spoke on the topic of the
liberation of Khalistan. He said that the idea of CI separate
election could be good for some minorities but was something
that would hold back the struggle for freedom of minority
nations that are dominant in their areas. He gave four radio
interviews on Punjabi stations that are listened to
worldwide.
Professor Gurtej Singh said, ``As part of my narration [for
the book], I found myself suggesting a theory indicating the
spurious nature of India's struggle for freedom. I am aware
that it renders the main activities of the Congress Party and
its leaders to an exercise in collaboration. But I am in good
company in coming to that conclusion. Michael Edwards, in his
The Myth of the Mahatma. has clearly shown that the British
really feared the `Western style revolutionaries' whom Gandhi
effectively neutralized. The Administration considered Gandhi
as an ally of the British as a neutralizer of rebellion.''
``This book does not clarify everything, but it clarifies a
lot,'' said Brigadier Usman Khalid, Director of LISA. ``It
lays the foundation for friendship between two irrepressible
nations of the subcontinent--the Muslims and the Sikhs. The
national cohesion that exists within the Muslims and the
Sikhs cannot be replicated in the caste based Brahminic
society,'' Brigadier Khalid said, ``Indian secularism is
'fraudulent; Indian nationalism is a pious hope without
foundation or purpose. The book nails those lies. It is a
great starting point for the `freedom for all in South Asia.'
''
``Despite the Indian Government's massive efforts over two
decades to crush the Khalistani freedom movement and the
other freedom movements, there remains strong support for
Khalistan in Punjab and the surrounding Sikh areas,'' Dr.
Aulakh said. He noted the anniversary of the attack on the
Golden Temple and the atrocities that were committed in
Operation Bluestar. He took note of the arrests of Sikh
leaders in Punjab for making speeches and hoisting the flag.
He noted that Khalistan slogans were raised inside the Golden
Temple recently. He noted the seminars organized by Atinder
Pal Singh and took note of the atrocities committed by the
Indian government. such as the kidnapping and murder of
Jaswant Singh Khalra, the murder of Akal Takht Jathedar
Gurdev Singh Kaunke, tearing apart the driver of Saba Charan
Singh, and the mass cremation of Sikhs. He cited the
Chithisinghpora massacre, the bombing of an Indian Airlines
flight in 1985, and other atrocities committed by the Indian
government.
A report issued by the Movement Against State Repression
(MASR) shows that India admitted that it held 52,268
political prisoners under the repressive ``Terrorist and
Disruptive Activities Act'' (TADA) even though it expired in
1995. Many have been in illegal custody since 1984. There as
been no list published of those who were acquitted under TADA
and those who are still rotting in Indian jails.
Additionally, according to Amnesty International, there are
tens of thousands of other minorities being held as political
prisoners. The MASR report quotes the Punjab Civil Magistracy
as writing ``if we add up the figures of the last few years
the number of innocent persons killed would run into lakhs
[hundreds of thousands.]'' The Indian government has murdered
over 250,000 Sikhs since 1984, more than 300,000 Christians
in Nagaland, over 90,000 Muslims in Kashmir. tens of
thousands of Christians and Muslims throughout the country,
and tens of thousands of Tamils, Assamese, Manipuris, and
others. The Indian Supreme Court called the Indian
government's murders of Sikhs ``worse than a genocide,''
Government-allied Hindu militants have burned down
Christian churches and prayer halls, murdered priests, and
raped nuns. The Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) described the
rapists as ``patriotic youth'' and called the nuns
``antinational elements.'' Hindu radicals, members of the
Bajrang Dal, burned missionary Graham Stewart Staines and his
two sons, ages 10 and 8, to death while they surrounded the
victims and chanted `Victory to Hannuman,'' the Hindu monkey-
faced God. The Bajrang Dal is the youth arm of the RSS. The
VHP is a militant Hindu Nationalist organization that is
under the umbrella of the RSS.
``The genocidal policies of the Indian government are aimed
at eliminating all these groups,'' Dr. Aulakh said. ``Self-
determination must be the standard,'' he said. ``Short of
that, it is hard to see how the freedom of all people in
South Asia will be protected.''
We thank the London Institute of South Asia for including
Dr. Aulakh in its presentations. We would like to thank
General Khalid, Dr. Awatar Singh Sekhon, V.T. Rajshekar, and
all the trustees of the Institute for inviting Dr. Aulakh to
make this presentation.
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