The coin floated in the air, so the story, landed like Dilaar Singh called it: Fortune had given him the right to die a martyr.
Earlier this week, a Portrait of Dilaar Singh – Punjab police who killed the Chairman of the Singh Beant Minister in August 1995 – joined people from many Khalistan terrorists who adorn the walls of the Sikh Menc. Mencil Museum in the Amritsar golden temple.
Most of the intended audience – Estimated 12 million Punjabi diaspora in countries such as Australia, Canada, Britain and the United States – will never visit this warning to the killers.
For them, Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC), who manages the museum and many SIKH religious institutions, have a message on Twitter: Dilaar Singh ended the cruelty and violations of human rights committed against Sikh. “
In 2019, for example, Sikhs for Justice (SFJ) based in the United States issued advertisements that respected Talwinder Singh Parmar-who were responsible for Indian Air Flights in 1985 which killed more than 300 people, most of India.
The ad was shared ahead of the ‘Khalistan referendum’ arranged by SFJ, who was trying to “liberate Punjab from the Indian occupation”.
The Honoring of Terrorists is a “middle” part of the Cyber war to Khalistan, Canadian writer Terry Milewski has recorded.
According to Khalistan Extremism Monitor (KEM), run by the Think Tank Institute for Conflict Management (ICM based in New Delhi