By Tricitynews Reporter
Chandigarh
05th November:- A
Special Investigation Team (SIT) formed by the central government must not
waste the opportunity to deliver justice for the 1984 Sikh massacre, said
Amnesty International India today at the Chandigarh launch of a campaign digest
on the massacre.
Titled “32 years and waiting: An era
of injustice for the 1984 Sikh massacre’’, the campaign digest outlines the
cover up that followed the massacre and the status of various official
investigations over the last 32 years. The digest also carries personal
accounts of survivors.
The Delhi police had closed
investigations into hundreds of cases after the massacre, citing a lack of
evidence. A special investigation team (SIT) constituted by the central
government in January 2015 to re-investigate cases related to the massacre, has
made slow progress. In November, it had identified 58 cases for
reinvestigation.
Sanam Sutirath Wazir, Campaigner at
Amnesty International India, said that the SIT raised hopes among victims and
survivors that they would finally get justice. But the SIT’s apparent lack of
transparency so far has been disturbing.
The SIT has the authority to file
charges against accused persons where there is sufficient available evidence.
It was originally given six months to complete this exercise, but received
extensions in August 2015 and August 2016. It is now slated to complete its
investigation in February 2017, two years after it was set up.
In June 2016, Amnesty International
India and a range of prominent activists, journalists, lawyers and political
leaders made a series of recommendations related to effective investigation,
comprehensive reparations and legal reforms, to be submitted to the Ministry of
Home affairs.
Since November 2014, over 600,000
people, most of them from Punjab have supported Amnesty International India’s
campaign demanding justice for the victims of the massacre.
A short film on the life of Darshan
Kaur, a survivor of the massacre, was also screened at the event. Darshan Kaur,
who was 21 years old during the violence, lost her husband and 12 relatives.
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