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Urgent Action - Jagdish Tytler May Be Coming To The Uk On 29 October


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Please write to your MP using http://www.writetothem.com/

Follow this up with a telephone call tomorrow (Wednesday 28 October). Houses of Parliament switchboard 020 7219 3000 - ask for your MP by name and they will put you through to the MPs office.

Write to your MP & confirm you have done this by posting here on Sikh Sangat

URGENT ACTION - JAGDISH TYTLER MAY BE COMING TO THE UK ON 29 OCTOBER

Upon receipt of this letter please write to your MP along the following lines:

Dear [MPs name]

It has come to our attention that Jagdish Tytler a controversial ex-politician from India who has been implicated in the anti-Sikh pogroms of November 1984 may have been granted a visa to enter the UK on 29 October. It is outrageous that someone involved in the genocide of Sikhs and crimes against humanity, including British subjects living in the UK that had family members killed in the genocide almost 25 years ago to the day.

We request you immediately contact:

i) the Foreign and Commonwelth Office and Foreign Secretary demanding why a visa may have been granted to someone involved in genocide and crimes against humanity, including British subjects living in the UK

ii) the UK Border Agency and the Home Secretary insisting that Jagdish Tytler not be allowed to enter the UK

Some background information is below:

Jagdish Tytler was the Indian Union Minister of State for Overseas Indian Affairs, a position he resigned from after an official commission of inquiry noted the 'balance of probability' indicated he was responsible for inciting and leading murderous mobs against the Sikh community in Delhi during the 1984 Anti-Sikh Pograms.

The official report of the Nanavati Commission of the Government of India found 'credible evidence' against Tytler, saying he 'very probably' had a hand in organising the attacks. The Indian government, however, decided not to prosecute Jagdish Tytler due to lack of concrete evidence.

The Nanavati Commission report was 185 pages long. The commission submitted its final report in February 2004 detailing accusations and evidence against senior members of the Delhi wing of the then ruling Congress Party, including Jagdish Tytler, later a Cabinet Minister, MP Sajjan Kumar and late minister H.K.L. Bhagat. They were accused of instigating mobs to avenge the assassination of Indira Gandhi by killing Sikhs in their constituencies. On August 10, 2005, Jagdish Tytler was forced to resign from the Union Council of Ministers.

India's Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) closed all cases against Jagdish Tytler in November 2007 for his alleged criminal conspiracy to engineer attacks against Sikhs in the aftermath of Indira Gandhi’s assassination on October 31, 1984. CBI submitted a report to the Delhi court which stated that no evidence or witness was found to corroborate the allegations against Tytler of leading murderous mobs during 1984.

It was also alleged in the court that then member of the Indian Parliament Jagdish Tytler was complaining to his supporters about relatively "small" number of sikhs killed in his parliamentary constituency Delhi Sadar, which in his opinion had undermined his position in the ruling Indian National Congress party of India.

However in December 2007, a witness Jasbir Singh, who lives in California, appeared on several private television news channels in India, and stated that he was never contacted by Central Bureau of Investigation. India's main opposition party Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) demanded an explanation from the minister in charge of CBI in Indian Parliament. However, Minister of State for Personnel Suresh Pachouri, who is in charge of department of CBI, and was present in the parliament session refused to make a statement.

On December 18 2007, Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate of Delhi court Mr. Sanjeev Jain, who had earlier dismissed the case after CBI submitted a misleading report in his court; ordered India's Central Bureau of Investigation to reopen cases against Jagdish Tytler. In December 2008, a two member CBI team was sent to New York to record the statements of two eyewitnesses, Jasbir Singh and Surinder Singh. The two witnesses have stated that they saw Jagdish Tytler lead a mob, but did not want to come to India as they feared for their security.

[Your name]

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The british government and other gorverning bodies do not need to be made aware of jagdish tytler. Im sure they all know what he has done, it will only be our so called leaders that will engage in private meetings with him and try to beg friedns. If anything he should be allowed into uk and then the police and governing bodies can trie him for his bakwaas in india and if they arnt lucky then some soormeh of maharaj may get to him before them

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If the information is credible then pass it onto these guys ..

http://www.redress.org/

This is the organisation that tried to have muhammed alam and sanjeev gupta (police officers guilty of human rights abuses and genocide in punjab) tried when they visited the UK a few years ago. Unfortunetly was not succesful then, but may be different now.

This is in hand!

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Letter sent by Rob Marris MP, Chair All Party Parliamentary Group for UK Sikhs

Rt. Hon. David Miliband MP

Secretary of State

Foreign & Commonwealth Office

King Charles Street,

London

SW1A 2AH

28 October 2009

My ref: RHM/281009/01

Dear David,

Jagdish Tytler: citizen of India

Entry to the United Kingdom

I write as Chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group for UK Sikhs.

I understand that Mr. Jagdish Tytler may have been granted a visa to enter the UK on 29 October 209. He is a controversial former politician from India, who is alleged to have been deeply involved in the November 1984 anti-Sikh pogroms in India, in the aftermath of the assassination of Prime Minister Mrs. Indira Gandhi on 31 October 1984. Many survivors of those harrowing events are now living in the UK; as are the relatives of many victims.

It would be unacceptable for someone who had committed such acts to be admitted to the UK, even to visit.

In 1984 Mr. Tytler was the Union government Minister of State for Overseas Indian Affairs, a position from which he resigned after an official commission of inquiry found that, on a balance of probabilities, he was responsible for inciting and leading murderous mobs against the Sikh community in Delhi during the 1984 anti-Sikh pogroms.

I am told that the final report of the Nanavati Commission was submitted in February 2004, detailing accusations and evidence against members of the 1984 government, including Mr. Tytler; and that the Commission found "credible evidence" against Mr. Tytler, saying that he "very probably" had a hand in organising the attacks. Nevertheless, although the Indian government decided not to take steps against Mr. Tytler, citing a lack of evidence, he subsequently resigned from the Union Council of Ministers.

I should point out that, in November 2007, India's Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) closed all its cases against Mr. Tytler, and submitted to a court in Delhi a report which stated that no evidence or witnesses had been found to corroborate the allegations against Mr. Tytler of leading murderous mobs during 1984.

However, in December 2007, a witness Mr. Jasbir Singh (now living in California), appeared on several private television news channels in India, and stated that he was never contacted by Central Bureau of Investigation. Thus, on 18 December 2007, Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate of the Delhi court, Mr. Sanjeev Jain, ordered the CBI to re-open cases against Mr. Tytler. In December 2008, a two-member CBI team was sent to New York to record the statements of two eyewitnesses, Mr. Jasbir Singh and Mr. Surinder Singh. Those two witnesses have stated that they saw Mr. Tytler lead a mob, but did not want to come to India to give evidence, because they feared for their personal safety.

In these circumstances, I urge you to review very carefully the reported decision to allow Mr. Tytler to enter the United Kingdom; and, if he already be here, to review whether he should leave forthwith.

Yours sincerely,

Rob

Rob Marris

MP for Wolverhampton South West

Rob Marris MP also had an emergency meeting with the junior Foreign Office minister, Ivan Lewis MP, who covers India. He gave him a copy of his letter to the Foreign Secretary, and implored to look into this issue urgently.

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Many of you may have heard earlier that Tytler has been dropped from the delegation to visit London tomorrow.

Another slap in his face!

Thank you for the assistance of all those that wrote to MPs. It is estimated we contacted over 100 MPs in less than 24 hours. We look forward to many more joining the Sikh Lobby Network so we can take up such matters quickly and exert pressure on MPs.

Simply send your name and postal address to info@sikhfederation.com to join the Sikh Lobby Network and join this sewa

Many thanks once again.

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Many of you may have heard earlier that Tytler has been dropped from the delegation to visit London tomorrow.

Wonderful!

BTW, could you please give a link or source that I can forward to my peers and friends which describes the issue as it happened, or a news links, or anything that gives some details in a formal manner?

Thanks!

Chardi kala.

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THIS IS WHAT TYTLER WAS COMING OVER FOR:

Let the Games begin: Stage set for Queen's Baton Relay

Akanksha Banerji

CNN-IBN

London: The curtain-raiser to the 19th Commonwealth Games will take place in London on Thursday. The Queen of England will launch the Baton Relay and with it will being the official countdown to the Games. This relay to Delhi will be the longest in the games' history. President Pratibha Patil will attend the commencement ceremony at Buckingham palace.

Several celebrated sporting icons will be the first to carry the baton before it sets off on its marathon journey around the world. Olympic gold medalist Abhinav Bindra will be the first one to hold the baton. Others include former Indian skipper Kapil Dev, tennis star Sania Mirza, Olympic bronze winner Vijendra Kumar, weightlifter Karnam Malleshwari and squash champion, Misha Grewal Soni.

Sporting heroes from the british side will include Olympic champion Lord Sebastian Coe and cricketer Monty Panesar.

"It's a fantastic feeling and it's an honour," said Dev.

The mood is jubilent and excited and even Organising Committee Chairman Suresh Kalmadi and Commonwealth Games Federation (CGF) President Michael Fennell set aside their 'issues' and were all smiles ahead of the grand spectacle.

"The baton and the baton journey is symbolic in many ways. It enables so many people to be part of it. This has an international sector and a domestic sector. So even in India this will go to every part and not just Delhi, so this is significant," said Fennell.

This is the longest Baton Relay so far. It's 1,90,000 kms in 340 days," said Kalmadi.

Once the Queen's Baton Relay is launched from Buckingham palace on Thursday morning, there is no looking back. The commencement ceremony will be a grand spectacle, but once the festivities are over, and the baton starts its marathon journey, the spotlight will shift to the games and to India. Eleven months to go, lots to be done and from now on, the whole world will be watching.

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