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Hanging by a Thread: The Case of Prof. Devinder Pal Singh Bhullar

SHRUTI RAVINDRAN

 

 

 

EDITOR'S NOTE:   Historian and author Barbara Tuchman once wrote in one of her famous tomes of how nations in their arrogance, when standing at crossroads and faced with history-making choices, tend to choose the wrong turn and head off into a path of self-destruction and oblivion.

She titled that book “The March of Folly”.

India today is at such a crossroads. And it appears that it too is about to take -- yet again -- a wrong turn. News reports indicate that the execution of Prof Devinder Pal Singh Bhullar by the Indian state is imminent.

The following piece was first published on sikhchic.com in July 2011. It is being republished today to remind us of the extent of the travesty of justice at the hands of a country which has become intoxicated by its excesses. We are about to witness how short-sightedness, when coupled with narrow-mindedness, ultimately leads to blindness. 

 

 

Navneet Kaur, wife of India's death row inmate, Prof. Devinder Pal Singh Bhullar, is courteous but wary, seated in her room at the Gurdwara Rakab Ganj in New Delhi.

Clad in a lavender kurta patterned with grey and brown flowers, she tends to lose her gaze somewhere beyond the half-open door, a frown furrowing her forehead. But when she begins to speak, she looks squarely at you, in a daunting stare that seems to at once weigh you up and dismiss you.

“I’m going to call these people,” she says, waving a newspaper article that referred to her husband as a ‘dreaded KLF (Khalistan Liberation Force) militant’, “and say, ‘Who told you he’s a militant?’ The police never found any weapon, any identification, any piece of paper. If he is proved guilty, if they find evidence, I’ll be the first to say ‘hang him’.”

That is the fate currently in store for Devinder Pal Singh, after President Pratibha Patil summarily rejected his mercy petition on 25 May this year after an eight-year wait. He had been No. 18 on the list of mercy pleas, but Patil - and the Home Ministry - were evidently spurred into action by a writ petition that Devinder's wife, along with the Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee (DSGMC), had filed in the Supreme Court on 15 May, asking why his mercy petition had not been addressed since it was filed in January 2003.

Navneet’s lawyer, K.T.S. Tulsi, swiftly challenged the presidential order, saying the long torturous wait has made Devinder mentally unsound, and that he cannot be hanged in such a state. This, along with the original petition, is likely to come up for hearing on 11 July.

For Navneet, it has been a long, lonely wait, filled with nothing but the endless paperwork of petitions and appeals for company. The wait began barely three months into her marriage to Devinder, in December 1991. Then, a professor of mechanical engineering in Ludhiana’s Guru Nanak Engineering College, Devinder was believed by the police to be connected to a remote-controlled bomb attack on the vehicle of a notoriously brutal Senior Supt. of Police, Sumedh Saini, credited with “finishing off” the Khalistani insurgency with former Punjab Police DGP, K.P.S. Gill.

Navneet, for her part, maintains that the police came after him because they didn’t want him to “raise his voice” about the 42 college students who had gone missing.

According to the writ petition filed by Navneet and the DSGMC, the police raided Devinder’s house following the attack, and when they didn’t find him, they “abducted his father and maternal uncle”, who were “tortured to death in police custody”. The petition adds that Devinder's engineer friend, Balwant Singh Multani,  was “also abducted at the same time and detained in police custody by Saini … and tortured to death.”

“They also picked up my dad,” recalls Navneet, “and released him after one-and-a-half months’ torture. They tied his hands, beat him with sticks, kept him in the cold, somewhere, with no FIR, no arrest.” She adds that the torture and detention left him “mentally disturbed, and barely capable of walking - the beatings had made his muscles loose”.

Devinder went into hiding, and Navneet took on a job as a hostel warden in a private school in Bhatinda to get her mind off the turmoil. They never dared meet in between - “[If] he came to see me, they’d shoot him,” says Navneet, “that time, they shot youngsters and got stars.”

Saini, for instance, earned himself a gallantry award in 1987.

On 11 September 1993, the cavalcade of the then Youth Congress President, M.S. Bitta, was hit by a remote-controlled blast, leaving 12 people dead. The Delhi Police conjectured that the blast was similar to the attack against Saini, and began to look for Devinder as well. In 1994, Devinder and his wife arranged to move to Vancouver, Canada, “to have a peaceful life”. Navneet went ahead, and Bhullar was caught with false papers while he was changing planes in Frankfurt, remained briefly in custody, and was deported to India in January 1995.

The extradition was judged illegal two years later by a Frankfurt court.

He was tried for minor passport offences, and then, in a Delhi trial court, under the draconian Terrorist & Disruptive Activities Act (TADA), which lapsed later that year. His co-accused in the case, Daya Singh Lahoria, who was extradited from the U.S. on condition that he wouldn’t be tried under TADA, was acquitted for lack of evidence. Bhullar wasn’t so lucky. Under TADA, acts of terrorism attracted a mandatory death sentence, and induced confessions were admissible as evidence. And that was all the Delhi Police had against Devinder - a thumb imprint and signature on a confessional statement, which he later retracted in court.

Yet, despite the lack of any eyewitnesses or evidence pinning him to his alleged misdeeds, Devinder was sentenced to death under TADA by a Delhi trial court in August 2001. Later that year, he appealed unsuccessfully against the conviction, though the three-judge bench could not reach a unanimous verdict. One of the judges, Justice M.B. Shah, held that Devinder could not be convicted on the basis of a “dubious confession”, let alone given a death sentence, and recommended that he be acquitted.

But Shah was overruled by the other two judges, who awarded the death penalty despite Shah’s dissenting opinion. “It’s the first case in the world,” points out Tulsi,  “in which a death sentence has been given despite a difference of opinion among the judges. Even room for 1 per cent doubt cannot be called ‘the rarest of rare’ cases, and here there was 33 per cent uncertainty.” 

According to a 2008 Amnesty International report on Supreme Court judgments on the death penalty, the majority judges ‘waxed eloquent about the need to combat the ‘menace of terrorism’, which was a matter of ‘international concern’.’ The judgment also refers to 9/11 - though the Delhi blast took place on a 9/11 six years prior to the one that made the date infamous. It also referred to the December 2001 attack on the Indian Parliament, which took place while the appeal was being heard.

Since 2003, as successive Presidents dawdled over his mercy plea, Devinder has remained in solitary confinement in Tihar’s jail No. 3. “He’s in an 8 x 10 [ft] cell, with the toilet, bed, all in the same place,” says Navneet. “This room [her Rakab Ganj quarters] is very clean, but I feel even this is not so good. He was raised in a good family, so delicate, his mother and aunt tell me he never used to go out in the sunshine. And he has to face all this.”

The years of waiting on death row have taken their toll. Supreme Court judgments commuting death sentences to life imprisonment have cited the “brooding horror of hanging” and the “unique mental anguish and suffering” that is termed “death row syndrome”. While as a young under-trial, Devinder was even interested in pursuing an MBA from jail - a request that was rejected - his 5,700 days in limbo have sapped him of all hope and the will to live. They have also reduced him to a state of infirmity that belies his 46 years of age. His wife says he now looks closer to 60, and his medical records from the past few years speak of numerous health complaints, including chest pain, shortness of breath, heaviness of chest, numbness of neck, and depression. “It’s all 99 per cent stress,” adds Navneet. “Under the death sentence, he is dying every day!”

Since last December, Devinder has been admitted to the Institute of Human Behaviour and Allied Sciences (IHBAS) in east Delhi. “He came in with severe depression with suicide risk,” says IHBAS director, Dr Nimesh Desai. “His condition has only worsened, despite our best efforts.”

Desai describes him as “dishevelled, negligent of his health care, suicidal in thought and intent” and incapable of speaking, “because of high despondency”. He is also indifferent to suggestions of activities intended to make him “feel better”. “When we say, ‘TV dekhiye, logon se miliye,’ he tells us, ‘Why? What’s the point?’” says Desai. “His reaction is understandable. What the hell does one say to such a person? What message of hope can there be?”

His lawyer as of the past two months, K.T.S. Tulsi, says Devinder seemed fragile when he went to visit him at the IHBAS psychiatric ward a month ago. “He kept telling me, ‘Main attvaadi nahi haan, attvaad de khilaaf haan.’ (‘I’m not a terrorist, I’m opposed to terrorism.’)”

Upkar Kaur, his 75-year-old mother, says he is now so disoriented he can barely tell who she is. “Ab unka dimaag hi thheek nahin hai, bolta nahin hai, pehchanta nahin hai, ki yeh meri mother hai,” she says. “Yeh bilkul galat baat hai. Mera beta padha-likha hai, mechanical engineer hai, criminal mind nahi hai mera bachcha.” (He is not mentally sound, he doesn’t speak or know that I’m his mother. My son is no criminal, he is an educated man.)

For Upkar, who now lives in Sacramento, California, with her younger son, the verdict is tragedy twice over. Twenty years after her husband was tortured and killed, justice has still not been served. “Ek innocent ko buri tarah maarna, cruelty se maarna… He never so much as hurt a dog, and they jumped on his stomach, threw him down three floors …” she says, adding that whoever did this, “Woh parmaatma se bhugtega zaroor (The Lord will make them pay).”

Saini, incidentally, is currently facing charges of kidnapping, torture and murder, which the CBI filed against him after the Chandigarh High Court directed them to do so in 2008. Meanwhile, the case he foisted on Devinder, accusing him of attempt to murder and attempt of terrorism fell apart in 2006, due to lack of evidence.

This is of no consolation to Navneet. For the past month, she has abandoned her aged parents and her job as a nurse in a Vancouver general hospital, to be in Delhi, where every day, she shuttles between Devinder’s hospital and every embassy and human rights NGO she can think of. The effort has not been in vain. Last month, the European Union and the German ambassador to India wrote to the Home Minister, opposing Devinder’s execution, and stressing that his extradition in 1995 was illegal.

Sikh groups like the SGPC and political parties, including the Shiromani Akali Dal and the opposition Congress in Punjab, have been rallying to Navneet’s side, asking the Prime Minister to grant Devinder clemency. On 20 June, Navneet and her mother-in-law accompanied a 21-member delegation from a rally in Amb Sahib Gurdwara, Mohali, to submit a memorandum appealing to the Punjab Governor to intervene. On the same day, Sikh groups around the world, in Berlin, Holland and Vancouver, staged protests at their respective Indian embassies. “Sikh people, we have our differences,” Navneet says, “but we’re all united on this issue.”

Around the same time, the Save Bhullar campaign went viral on social networking sites, with the Sikh diaspora changing their profile pictures to its symbolic image - a picture of a poignantly youthful, well-groomed Devinder in a pastel pink shirt and matching turban, with a noose hovering ominously before him. The same image spread across Punjab, through T-shirts, which were sold outside the Golden Temple in Amritsar, right alongside posters depicting Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale.

At the press conference convened by the DSGPC at the Gurdwara Rakab Ganj in Delhi on 2 July, references to militancy are entirely absent, though there is a faint spirit-scented air of sacrifice about the Sikh youth groups in a corner, who are donating blood to inscribe sanguineous petitions to the President. DSGPC president Paramjit Singh Sarna informs the crowd that he would deliver these to the President and the Home Minister, along with 125 more blood-signatures from youth groups in Ludhiana, as well as a hefty file containing the signatures of 40,000 Sikhs in Vancouver.

Navneet then addresses the gathering. “I’ve been waiting for 20 years. I’ve had no justice. I’ve had mental torture,” she says, in a voice that rises to an inaudible gasp with every sentence.

Afterward, as the crowd crams their plates with rice under a tent leaking rainwater, Navneet says, “I had a very good life before marriage. People who see me now say, ‘She was one of the happiest girls in our family.’” Her voice falters when she thinks of that happy girl whose dreams were destroyed, as much as it does for the husband she prepares to see in a psychiatric ward - the defeated shell of the “intelligent, soft-spoken” man she knew 20 long years ago.

 

[Courtesy: Open]

First published: July 11, 2011

Republished: April 15, 2013

Conversation about this article

1: Gurmeet Kaur (Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.A.), July 11, 2011, 3:16 PM.

Navneet Kaur, my dear sister, the whole Sikh Panth stands with you today. Your husband has brought all of us together one more time and your endurance and standing right next to him all this time is exemplary. Keep fighting - the prayers of the 30 million strong Sikh nation will be answered, if not in this world, then surely in His court.

2: Santokh Singh Saran (Birmingham, United Kingdom), July 13, 2011, 3:21 AM.

In view of the world opinion and facts of the matter, Prof. Devinder Pal Singh and others languishing in India's prisons should be set free and their families be compensated. The architects of false encounters and state terrorist machinery must be made redundant. A truth commission under the United Nations should be set up so that Indians and the world as a whole realizes what has been happening to Sikhs in India.

3: Mohammad Imran (U.S.A.), July 13, 2011, 2:09 PM.

It is common in India for police to bring up charges without proof. It is also common for lower courts and TADA courts to accept police accounts verbatim without questioning the police and their methodology. This has happened to hundreds of Muslims in India, many of whom are still languishing in jail because police cannot find verifiable evidence to take them to court for getting a verdict. Prof. Devinder Pal Singh has my support. His sentence should be commuted. In my opinion his case should be tried and disposed of, based on the evidence the police has collected. If the evidence does not stand scrutiny of the court, then he should be released.

4: G C Singh (USA), April 15, 2013, 11:21 AM.

India is going to repeat the history of Kehar Singh and conduct another judicial murder of a Sikh freedom fighter so that the ruling party can garner Hindu votes. Professor Devinderpal Singh Bhullar is being hanged on the basis of his thumb impression on a confessional statement obtained in police torture chambers although a Supreme Court judge from an earlier panel had disagreed with judgement of his other two colleagues. The saddest part in this sordid affair is the role played by double-faced collaborator, Parkash Singh Badal, who under the influence of the RSS has sold the Sikh nation to Hindutava forces. After the Dogra brothers during Maharaja Ranjit Singh's rule, Badal is the next one to such damage to the Sikh nation.

5: Baljit Singh Pelia (Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.), April 15, 2013, 11:29 AM.

Not much can be expected from the highest court of a godforsaken country that has rejected the path of it's own Gurus and termed their followers terrorists. While the world advances, India is on a path of lawlessness, adversity and perpetual decline. Incredible India - rape, robberies, killing of the innocent, and corruption are the hallmarks. The intelligent and educated must realize that they need not be ruled by the crooked who get elected. That the nationalists they seek in Hindutwa and other means are the Sikhs that have always advanced the rights of all as a nation. That a free India need not follow the divide-and-rule laws and policies initiated by the British to rule an enslaved people. That they need not term the true nationalists as terrorists. If the spirit of collective wellbeing infused by the Gurus is extinguished, the nation faces a very dark future, not much different than what we see in Afghanistan and Iraq today.

6: Gurteg Singh (New York, USA), April 15, 2013, 12:51 PM.

If press reports are to be believed, India is going to murder Devinder Pal Singh in secret and will not hand over his body to his relatives. Indian Security forces are already being moved to Punjab to quell peaceful Sikh protests with massive force and shoot-at-sight orders. While the well known Hindu terrorists, criminals and mass murderers enjoy complete immunity and perks, as members of parliament or even cabinet ministers, while the innocent Sikhs are languishing for decades in Hindu dungeons. It is time for the Sikh diaspora to make all-out efforts to highlight the plight of the 30 million oppressed Sikhs in India, request the United Nations to send its observers and peacekeeping troops to Punjab and work overtime for the freedom of the Sikh nation.

7: Inderjeet (Thane, Maharashtra, India), April 15, 2013, 2:42 PM.

Have they already murdered him? The latest photo on facebook indicates this. https://fbcdn-sphotos-e-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash3/537417_376863535760668_676346003_n.jpg

8: Sunny Grewal (Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada), April 15, 2013, 4:22 PM.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2013/20130412/main2.htm - "The Punjab and Haryana High Court today ruled that charges of wrongful confinement, kidnapping and abduction against Punjab Director-General of Police Sumedh Saini do not constitute 'moral turpitude' and the orders of his appointment as police chief do not require to be interfered with." An update on Sumedh Saini!

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