Monday, 11 February 2008

Must Read Book

Indian State Terrorism

The Ugly Face Of Indian Democracy &

Indian Intelligence!

Blows Its Own Plane Out Of The Skies To Defame The Sikh Nation & To Muffle The Voice Of Freedom.

"Indian State Terrorism in the International Skies"

The book Soft Target is a proof of Indian State Terrorism and is banned in India.


softtar.jpg (147305 bytes)



Preface

"Soft target" is an espionage term used to describe a country, institution or group of people that is easy to penetrate and manipulate for subversive purposes. We like to think of this book as a non-fiction spy thriller. It has all the bloodletting, drama and intrigue of a spy tale. But it is also a true story.

Our purpose in writing this book is to make people aware of the grave injustice suffered by a group of new Canadians - the Sikhs. For several years, India has been engaged in a devious and ruthless operation to manipulate and destabilize Canada's Sikh population. The operation has been orchestrated by India's intelligence service and has left the Sikh community estranged from Canadian society.

It has also led to death and destruction. How did India get away with it? Part of the answer is that the keepers of our security, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) and its predecessor, the Security Service of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), were so preoccupied with the Soviet threat that nothing else seemed to matter. These agencies had neither the understanding of, nor the necessary multicultural manpower to deal with, any additional threats to Canadian security. To its credit, CSIS eventually woke up just before the tragic Air-India bombing that left 329 people, mostly Canadians, dead in June 1985. It chased the culprits right to the Indian embassy and consulates. But what it then faced was political interference.

CSIS is not a police force. It cannot make arrests and it cannot lay criminal charges. Neither can it issue marching orders to diplomats it identifies as spies. It is bound by law to notify the police about criminal matters. When it comes to espionage, the Department of External Affairs must decide whether to remove the diplomats concerned. CSIS found External to be an obstacle in its pursuit of the Indian spy network. Officials in that department were not anxious to embarrass a country that was Canada's gateway to Third World trade. Few in CSIS were happy with what was happening in their' investigation of the Air-India bombing, as well as their investigation into foreign interference in the affairs of Canadian Sikhs. Pat Olson and Fred Gibson were two of several CSIS officials who complained about the investigation. They and others were incensed that the Indian connection was being buried for reasons of political and economic expediency. Similarly angry were some members of the Metro Toronto Police intelligence branch and the RCW. Leads provided by such people led to the writing of Soft Target.

The names Pat Olson and Fred Gibson are pseudonyms. If their identities were not concealed, they could face prosecution under the Official Secrets Act and the loss of their jobs. We would like to thank them - and other people who volunteered information and whose identities have also been concealed - for their courage and forthrightness.

The authors also gratefully acknowledge the assistance of the following people: Gol Kashmeri, Shamil and Shireen; Sarwar Kashmeri; Nancy McAndrew and Kelly; editor Curtis Fahey; Felies Einhorn; Said Zafar; Peter Snowdon; David Altman; Leslie Taylor; Warren Barton; Gerry McAuliffe; Randy Ray; Haroon Siddiqui; and colleagues at the Globe and Mail and the Toronto Star.

Zuhair Kashmeri
Brian McAndrew

Toronto, February 1989

Copyright1989 Zuhair Kashmeri and Brian McAndrew

James Lorimer & Company, Publishers
Toronto, 1989

Indian Government has Committed such acts of violence and heinous crime against Sikhs and humanity. It is time to bring an end to this tyranny and state terrorism. Come forward and join the peaceful, democratic and political struggle to reclaim lost Sikh sovereignty and liberate the Sikh homeland of Punjab, Khalistan.

- Dr. P.S. Ajrawat

Faces of Indian Intelligence

Involved in Air India Plane Bombing 1985

Brij Mohan Lal

Indian Intelligence Agent Then Stationed

In Canada ( Read The Book Soft Target )

Air India's Plane & Its Wreckage

Surinder Malik

Indian Intelligence Agent Then Stationed

In Canada (Read the Book Soft Target )

Maloy Krishna Dhar

Indian Intelligence Agent

(Read His Book

OPEN SECRET - P-293)


Why is this book banned in India, there must be truth behind it?

Serve the creation

Sikhi teaches us that God is present in all beings and creatures. If we serve the creation we show love towards the creator. When I go to my white mates houses their gardens have bird feeds where wild birds can feed from. But all my Punjabi mates have no such thing, a loaf of tesco value bread costs 31p. That is the same price as a chocolate bar, I urge all Punjabis to at least spend 31p a week and put out bread in your garden for the birds.



The Creator has created the creation of all sorts. Ang 250 Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji


O my mind, meditate on the Lord of the Universe, the Lord, the Lord of the Universe, the Treasure of Virtue, the God of all creation. O my mind, chant the Name of the Lord, the Lord, the Eternal, Imperishable, Primal Lord God. ||1||Pause|| Ang 1202 Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji


Considering creation as the form of the Creator he feels to be a sacrifice unto it. Bhai Gurdass var 3


Girl Dumped at Darbar Sahib


Chandigarh, Feb. 9: A new-born girl wrapped in woollens was found abandoned in the Golden Temple complex with a letter, purportedly written by the mother, requesting that the infant be looked after.

“We have no option but to raise the girl,” SGPC secretary Dalmegh Singh said from Amritsar, alluding to the appeal to Avtar Singh Makkar, who heads the body responsible for the upkeep of Sikh shrines.

An SGPC official said the important thing to realize was “fate and her mother had willed the child to live” in a state where aborting girl children was rampant.

The girl was found on Thursday in a place called Dukh Bhanjan Beri where devotees bow before taking a dip in the temple pond.

Officials said the discovery of the baby inside the temple complex was significant. “Instead of being killed, the infant was left inside the temple in the care of God,” an SGPC source said.

Many gurdwaras now keep cradles where parents can leave baby girls instead of killing them. There have been demands within the SGPC to make couples take a vow at the time of marriage not to abort girl children in the womb.

Punjab has the lowest sex ratio in the country. The declining ratio, especially in the newborn-to-six age group — 875 girls per 1,000 boys in 1991, and 793 per 1,000 in 2001 — shows girls are still seen as a burden on families.

The Sikh rehat maryada (code of conduct) forbids believers from having any relationship with those who kill their daughters. The SGPC is also thinking of ostracizing those guilty of female foeticide.

These Sikhs lost the plot



KAC march foiled; workers detained
Rajay Deep
Tribune News Service

Bhai Rupa/Mehraj (Bathinda), February 10
Hundreds of activists of the Khalsa Action Committee (KAC) were detained today after they tried to take out a march near Salabatpura, the headquarters of Dera Sacha Sauda in Punjab. The police had made tight security arrangements to prevent the march but the KAC activists changed the venue of the march at the last minute from Bhai Rupa village to Gurdwara Chota Gurusar in Mehraj village.

When the KAC activists tried to take out the vehicle carrying Guru Granth Sahib from the Chota Gurusar Gurdwara premises, the police intercepted them. The Panj Piaras were detained and the Palki was taken in possession by the police personnel who blocked their way by parking a police bus and a jeep in the middle of the way.

Despite the police having turned the villages in the area into a fortress, and motorists being thoroughly frisked, around 70 KAC activists arrived on a tractor-trailer and joined the activists already present there. After some time, around 20 more KAC men arrived at the venue on a jeep. The police arrested them.

Showing resentment over the denial of permission to take out Guru Granth Sahib in a procession, hardliner Sikhs delivered speeches and raised anti-government slogans outside the gurdwara. They accused that Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal and his son Sukhbir Singh Badal of supporting the Dera Sacha Sauda chief for political gains.

Meanwhile, in Dhapali village, about 10 km from Mehraj, another religious march was attempted. However, the police stopped the religious procession near Bhai Rupa village. But, after discussions with the leader of the KAC group, Bhai Boota Singh, the police allowed only the Panj Piaras and the holy Beer to proceed to Gurdwara Mansarovar in Bhai Rupa village with four other KAC leaders. The police refused permission to other KAC activists assembled there to join the march.

Sadhu Singh of Gumti Kalan village, along with 20 KAC activists, was arrested as he lodged a protest in Bhai Rupa village against the detention of the activists by the police. They wanted to join the march.

The KAC activists at Gurdwara Mansarovar deferred the march in the afternoon and placed the Bir inside the gurdwara. After passing a resolution to boycott Badal, the KAC activists moved towards the village. But, immediately, the police, under orders from district magistrate Rahul Tewari, arrested the KAC activists, including some women.

Convener of KAC Bhai Mohkam Singh, who was arrested, said: “The march was not attempted from this place only. Our activists started the march from various other places, but the police detained them. Despite the tight security arrangements, many of us gathered here which indicates the failure of the administration.”

Jathedar Bhai Kumikar Singh, the member of the presidium of the Shiromani Akali Dal (Amritsar) (Panch Pardhani), said: “The police personnel themselves wanted to disturb peace. When we asked them to remove the bus from near the gurdwara, a senior police official suggested that we break its window panes.”

About the arrest of the KAC activists, the district magistrate said: “They have been detained as a preventive measure. Moreover, they defied the order issued under Section 144 of the CrPC. A case would be registered only against those leaders of radical Sikhs who did not pay heed to our instructions.”

When SSP Naunihal Singh was asked about the intelligence lapses, he said: “Earlier, we had the information that the march would begin from Bhai Rupa. So, we concentrated on the roads that lead to that village. But, they changed the venue. The KAC activists got only that much time which we took in deploying the force.”

Mediapersons obstructed

Vehicles of mediapersons, bearing the Press sticker on the windshields, were deflated and parked in a field some distance away from Gurdwara Chota Gurusar in an alleged attempt to prevent mediapersons from reaching the venue of the march. On being asked, district magistrate Rahul Tewari passed the buck on to the police officials and expressed regret.

Frontline comments:

Ok they wanted to protest they have every right, but why take maharaj there anything can happen.