A careful study of the various reports on the carnage and hundreds of
different eyewitness accounts makes it evident that the anti-Sikh
violence was the result of a well-planned conspiracy. The madness and
the bloodbath in which the Indian Capital drowned in the aftermath of
Mrs. Gandhi’s assassination, was not the result of any mass upsurge or
emotional spontaneity. There was a method in the madness.
(A) Meeting Were Organised On October 31, 1984
Following is a first person account of a taxi driver, Ram Singh (the
name has been changed for his safety): A prominent Congress Party leader
of Vinod Nagar called a special meeting on the evening of October 31.
Present in the meeting were a notorious smuggler and some other known
goondas. The meeting lasted until midnight.
The participants at the meeting, along with 200 to 250 people attacked
my house on November 1. They used rods to break open the doors. We, Ram
Singh’s two sons and 1, were sleeping. X ordered the mob to pour
kerosene oil over us and burn us alive. I got up with a start, grabbed
my kirpan and jumped out of the window. A neighbour, a Hindu from
Himachal Pradesh, helped me escape.
(1) A Nihang serving in the Pandav Nagar Gurudwara, Surjit Singh,
escaped death because he was away on the morning of November 1 but his
wife, daughter Minu, aged nine, and a friend, Nahan Singh and his wife,
were all burnt alive. I met Surjit Singh in the relief camp. He seemed
to have gone mad.
(2) On October 31, in Khajoori Bhjanpur Block of trans Yamuna’s Gamrhi
area, a prominent Congress Party leader belonging to the Gujjar
community, held a meeting in which his son, who has a kerosene oil depot
(state-sanctioned) and the principal of the local school participated.
These people actually drew up a list of Sikh families to be attacked on
November 1. According to a report on the Nanaksar relief camp, it is
difficult to describe the barbarity and brutality with which people were
killed in the following two-and-a-half-days. One hundred and fifty Sikhs
belonging to the families which took shelter in this camp were killed.
Among the killed, 45 percent were from Nand Nagari, most of them from
Block 1 to 3, Punjabi Muhalla and Bhajanpura. Block C reported the
maximum killings. There are 72 windows in age group 20-45 from here
alone.
(3) On October 31 evening, a congress party leader held a meeting in
Kalekhan basti near Nizamuddin, in which members of the gujjar community
besides a well-known doctor participate. All the participants were
Congress workers or supporters. They too were busy making plans to be
implemented in the following days.
(B) Political Organisers Of The Carnage
There were three types of Congress workers who organised the massacre:
Those who identified Sikh houses and other property and drew up proper
lists, those who organised the mobs and directed them to the targets
and, finally, those who provided the ‘arsenal’ for the carnage, including,
petrol and kerosene oil. According to the survivors, most of the
organisers were local leaders of the Congress party and some small-time
criminals, besides the notorious ones. The suppliers of kerosene oil and
petrol, to sell both of which requires a government permit, were either
Congress leaders or those who had solid links with Congressmen, says the
Nanaksar report.
Independent surveys too had the survivors (19 percent) and Hindu
neighbours of the victims (20 percent) blaming the Congress party
leaders, workers and supporters for the anti-Sikh violence. The opinion
of such a large number of people cannot be ignored without risking a
serious breach of truth. Among those who openly instigated the mobs and
spread rumours about the Sikh community having poisoned Delhi’s water,
are a prominent Congress leader and an associate of his. Three others
with them included a sweeper and a charas-smuggler. Many of those who
led the attacks were smartly dressed and alighted from cars and jeeps,
in what can be seen as solid pointers to their social and economic
status.
According to our survey of three different groups of survivors from
Patparganj, Khichripur and Kalyanpur, an off-white matador, which had
about a dozen people inside, including, a Congress Councillor, went to
Pandavnagar and the occupants of the vehicle were seen handing over
sticks and rifles to the mob with the instruction that they should be
used to "eliminate Sikhs."
The list of people who went to Pandavnagar in the matador, includes,
former Union Minister H K L Bhagat, former chief of the Delhi Congress
Tazdar Babbar, a Congress Metropolitan Councillor and an employee of the
Union Home Ministry, Mr. Vedi. However, no action has been taken against
any one of them.
In Bhogal, two Congress workers, including one who has a sweets shop,
personally directed the mob to loot Sikh shops, a direction that was
religiously implemented.
In Mongolpuri, a white Ambassador car occupant, who could not hide his
identity (a Congress Leader) despite wearing a mask, was seen giving
instructions to a mob. Shortly afterwards, the nearby Gurudwara was
burnt down.
In east Vinodnagar, white khadi-clad young men came in two buses and led
the local goons gathered there to attack the houses and other property
of Sikhs. It was under their direction that Sikhs were burnt alive.
In Jehangirpuri, the man who instigated the mob to kill and loot Sikhs,
was a Congress leader. He has been repeatedly named by the survivors as
the person who helped identify the property and other establishments of
Sikhs.
According to an affidavit filed by Trilokpuri’s Gurdip Kaur, about 500
people came to Block 32 on November 1 and although it was not possible
for her to identify a majority of them she recognised some of the
killers responsible for the murder of her family members. She has
identified Tello, Manu, Jagga and his wife, Draupdi, Kishori Jamandar (a
meat seller), Rampal Saroj (Congress party goon under whose supervision
many Sikhs were brutally killed), Rooplal and his three sons, who, she
said, were notorious thieves.
Rampal Saroj, said Gurdip Kaur, went to their street and assured the
Sikh families that no harm would be done to them. He even told them to
stay put in their houses as the "only means of escaping the mob
violence." Later, she said, she could not believe her eyes when she saw
him leading the killers to their street. He attacked their houses and
men within five hours of the first visit which was supposed to be a
friendly one. Many Sikhs were beaten to death or burnt alive under his
supervision, she added.
(C) The Process Of Identification Of Sikh Houses
And Property
The process of identification was as neatly planned as the violence that
followed. (1) Goons went around on two-wheelers and other vehicles from
house to house before coming back with more people. (2) School registers
were searched to identify Sikh houses. (3) Ration card and Voters’ lists,
which can only be procured from official sources, were another method to
identify Sikh houses. (4) The houses and other property were marked with
alphabets X, D (D) and S in an operation akin to what the Nazis did to
the establishments of Jews in Germany. Shopkeeper from Bhajanpura market
was personally seen marking the Sikh houses and shops.
(D) Weapons For The Carnage
Kerosene oil was procured from ration shop owners and kerosene depot
owners, some of the owners having been intimidated into supplying it but
many were more than willing contributors and, later, even participated
directly in the mob violence.
The plotters did not need any intoxicant before hatching the plant but
the mobs apparently needed liquor before they could go for the savage
killings. Liquor bottles were distributed free to the mobs before the
carnage.
In some cases, kerosene oil was mixed with phosphorous (many witnesses
referred to it as white powder) and another chemical, obviously, for
‘fast results.’
Diesel and petrol were procured from petrol pumps and private vehicles.
(E) How The Mobs Were Organised
(1) About 500 people armed with sticks, iron rods, soda-water bottles and
Kerosene oil-tin went to Harinagar Ashram in two groups. One group
landed there at 9.45 a.m. on November 1 by a local train and another one
at 11 a.m. the same morning by Narmada Express. Most of the people in
these groups were from the jhuggi-jhonpri colonies (where the poorest of
the urban poor live) but they were led by a Congress leader and his
three associates. The groups divided their ‘work’, with one heading
towards Bangla Sahib Gurudwara and the other towards Shaalimar Bagh, a
predominantly Sikh colony.
(2) In Jehangirpuri, the mobs included some local residents and people
from the neighbouring villages of Bhalsava Ramgarhand Badli.
(3) The killers came from the neighbouring areas either by bus
(ironically, the state bus services were not discontinued) or, just
walked it down.
(4) In Sultanpuri, the mob came from Pooth village along with local
goons from Block C-2, C-3, C-4, and C-6. I have the names of all these
goondas and can furnish them to the authorities, provided they are
interested.
(5) In Punjabi Bagh and Madipur, the people who led the mobs were the
same who organise political and other rallies for the Congress party.
The then Lt. Governor of Delhi, Mr. P.G. Gavai, at a press conference on
November 4, 1984, referred to the colonies where the riotous mobs were
most violent. These are the same colonies which provided the mass of
people attending the Congress rallies before 1984. And, hardly any
political rally, as we know in India, is spontaneously attended.
Mongolpuri, Sultanpuri, Trilokpuri and Kalyanpuri were the tasting
ground of the Congress leaders’ organising ability. According to a
report in the Statesman (November 5, 1984), in Jehangirpuri, the mob
killed a group of people during the anti-Sikh violence merely on
suspicion that these people had not voted for Congress in the proceeding
years municipal corporation election.
(F) The Mob Make-Up
(1) Notorious criminals, whose names are linked to many offences in the
official records, were involved in the violence and there are many who
would stand witness against them.
(2) People from the Scheduled and other lower castes such as Khatik,
Chamaar, Purbias, Jamandaara and Bhangis, most of whom breed pigs.
(3) Other backward castes like Jats, Gujjars and Ahirs, many of whom
were poor landowners (whose agricultural land was later acquired by the
government for establishing urban residential and commercial buildings).
(G) The Killers
The survivors of the carnage say that most of the killers were Jat
landowners, Bhangis and notorious criminals from their own areas. Some
of the killers have openly claimed that they were paid a fees by
Congress leaders to kill loot Sikhs. Even before the carnage, the common
man in their areas was scared of them because they were always drunk and
fishing for trouble. Survivors from Bhopal and Sultanpuri have alleged
that some cops were among the killers. So many years after they were
attacked, the victims’ families are still in dread of the following
three categories of killers - the cops, political leaders and Gujjars.
Even among them, there are some who are believed to be more savage than
the others including X who is a notorious criminal operating in Gamrhi,
Bhajanpura and Khajoori and is a close associate of a Congress leader. He
has licensed revolver and played a direct role in both planning the
massacre and the killings.
A dreaded criminal from the Gujjar community who was supplying milk to a
Sikh flat-owner in Nand Nagri, is known to have murdered the family
during the massacre.
(H) The Methodology Of Violence
The method of attack depended on the numbers constituting the mob. If
the number was large enough, the mob attacked Gurudwaras, Sikh houses,
shops and other property simultaneously. For instance, in Harinagar
Ashram, the mob divided the ‘work’ between two groups who went into
different directions for killing and looting. However, in cases where
the mob was small, say, just 100 to 150 people, the violence followed a
different course.
The first targets were Gurudwaras, followed by houses and shops.
The organised way in which the massacre was carried out leaves no room
for doubt that the killers were all highly ‘skilled’ at their job.
(I) Repeated Inspection Of Sikh Establishments
The mob came repeatedly to Sikh houses and shops until it got its
victims. In Bhogal, the mob set fire to many shop at 11 a.m. on November
1 and came back three hours later to make sure that the job had been
done well. In Jehangirpuri, where it had set fire to people in their
houses, the same exercise, of repeating the visit, was carried out.
(J) Slogans Coined For The Massacre
Slogans, the life-matter of all systematic campaigns, catchily coined by
the Congress party members, played a very significant role in prompting
the anti-Sikh violence.
The slogans were directed at three points: Emphasising the greatness of
Mrs Gandhi and the need for revenge against the Sikh community, marking
the entire Sikh community as anti-national and prompting the crowds to
eliminate the community.
For instance, look at the following slogans:
Jab tak sooraj chand rahega, Indira tera naam rahega. Khoon ka badla
khoon
(Indira’s name will live as long as the sun and the moon do. Seek blood
for blood.)
Sardaron ko jala do, namonnishan mita do
(Burn the Sikhs alive and let no trace of them remain)
Hindu Muslim bhai bhai, sardar onki karo safai
(Hindus and Muslims are brothers but let no Sikh remain)
(K) Rumours
Rumours, again potent catalysts for creating mass hysteria, were also
spread systematically, and, in three different stages.
Stage One
On the evening of October 31, just one rumour did the rounds. Mrs Gandhi
had been killed and the Sikh community in the Capital and elsewhere was
celebrating. Doordarshan, the official electronic media, with a monopoly
over all India telecast, focused its coverage on the assassination by
repeatedly showing Mrs Gandhi’s corpse and by declaring time and again
that she had been killed by two Sikh security guard. Doordarshan,
evidently, played a role even in instigating the masses by continually
airing the blood-thirsty Congress supporters who were shouting frenzied
slogans, "khoonka badla khoon (seek blood for blood)."
The rumour about Sikhs celebrating Mrs Gandhi’s assassination (by
distributing sweets and doing ‘bhangra’) was so strong that even the
literate population believed it and was outraged by it, although not one
single person in our survey could later confirm that he or she had
personally seen or heard any Sikh celebrate the killing.
Stage Two
On November 1, When Sikhs were being hacked and burnt alive and their
women were being gang-raped, three rumours, with the apparent aim of
ensuring that mass sympathy does not turn in their favour, were
systematically spread by the political workers of the ruling party,
famed for their skills at propaganda. The rumours being heard were that
every Gurudwara that was burnt was actually a god own for arms and
ammunition, that after the first round of killings, Sikhs were preparing
to strike back. ‘They will strike at night and they will kidnap Hindu
children, "were the kind of rumours that turned even the most neutral
citizen against the community. Some people, including small time workers
and labourer seven asked their employers to keep their children and
valuables in their safe custody. No evidence of any one Gurudwara having
even a single weapon of attack was found but the rumour about Gurudwaras
being arsenals of weapons had already turned the mass psyche against the
Sikhs.
One very bizarre slogan which emanated from the Chandni Chowk police
station was, "raat hamari, din tumhara (the day is yours and the night
ours for killings). The source of this slogan was that the police, which
did not get its share of the booty from a Sikh jeweller’s shop in
Chandni Chowk, raided the shop in the night and grabbed whatever was
left. Although the slogan actually meant that the mob will loot in the
day time and the cops at night, it was twisted to attribute retaliatory
strikes by the Sikh community. The truth is that some Sikhs, who had
licensed weapons for their defence had no time to use them because of
the sheer scale and suddenness of violence against them. The third and
the worst rumour, was that some Sikhs had poisoned Delhi’s water.
Anonymous callers phoned up newspaper offices and that of the Delhi
Municipal Corporation to say that ordinary citizens should avoid
drinking water. This rumour, naturally had a very negative impact on the
entire city and fuelled mistrust against Sikhs besides, of course,
stripping them of sympathy for their plight.
Stage Three
When train-loads of dead Sikhs were arriving in Delhi the rumour that
was systematically spread was that Sikhs of Punjab were sending
trainloads of Hindu dead bodies. Apparently, it was important to reverse
the truth as an indication to the killer mobs not to halt their job of
"eliminating every trace of the Sikh community."
An analysis of the four days of mass-scale and unprecedented violence
directed against an entire community proves amply, if proof is needed,
that the plotters were moving like ace chess players. The most notorious
leader, political or community, held meeting in his own area and
assigned jobs to people of mobilising mobs, distributing weapons of
assault identifying Sikh houses and shops and of making repeated rounds
of these places to complete the task of killing. Gurudwaras, rumoured to
be stock-houses of arms, were the first target of the mobs.
The aim of the violence was to systematically annihilate Sikhs, both
mentally and physically. The slogans, as is evident from the analysis
above, were very cleverly and carefully coined.
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