Sikh Community in UK storms outside British Parliament to protest against illegal detention of Sikh political prisoners in India.
LONDON: Thousands of Sikhs protested outside the British parliament on Wednesday (Jul 15), calling for the release of what they said were Sikh political prisoners in India.
Demonstrators also raised the case of octogenarian Bapu Surat Singh Khalsa, who is on hunger strike in India to press the same cause.
The demonstration, which blocked the roads outside the Houses of Parliament in London, was called by the Sikh Federation (UK), the largest Sikh organisation in Britain.
Its chair, Bhai Amrik Singh, said British Prime Minister David Cameron and Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond “were asked to urgently take up the issue of the release of Sikh political prisoners in Indian jails who have completed the terms of their sentence. But we have had no answers.
“It is a sad reflection that the present UK government is turning a blind eye to human rights violations of minorities in India fearing various trade deals could be jeopardized,” he said. “We have been forced to peacefully demonstrate at the lack of courage and action by the UK government on behalf of British Sikhs.”
More than 430,000 people (0.7 per cent of the population) said they were Sikhs in the last British census in 2011.
Khalsa Aid writes to Amnesty International
Upset over the silence of the government in redressing the prisoners’ issues and apprehensive over the life of Bapu Surat Singh Khalsa, who is sitting on hunger strike for the last 180 days demanding release of Sikh detainees who have completed their jail terms, UK based Sikh charity Khalsa Aid has knocked the doors of Amnesty International urging it to intervene without delay.
The organization has written a letter (copy sent to SinghStation) to the Amnesty International, who’s mandate is protection of prisoners rights to initiate a campaign not only for the release of the Sikh prisoners whose release is sought by Bapu Surat Singh Khalsa through his hunger strike, but also to save his “precious” life.