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First & Foremost Asian Weekly in Europe
Vol 46 | Issue 29
COMMUNITY UPROARS #FREEJAGGINOW TM
25th November to 1st December 2017
Let noble thoughts come to us from every side
Rupanjana Dutta
More than 400 Scottish Sikhs travelled in coaches all the way from Scotland to London in efforts to join upto thousand Sikhs protesting outside the Foreign Commonwealth Office in Whitehall on Thursday, against the arrest of Jagtar Singh Johal by Punjab Police for his alleged role in targeted killings in the state. He is accused of funding the purchase of weapons connected to the targeted killings of high-profile Hindus, and of “influencing the youth” by publishing material related to the deaths of thousands of Sikhs in pogroms in 1984. Johal, more popularly known as Jaggi, was in India for his wedding since end of October. The 30year-old Dumbarton man was with his new wife and his cousin when he was arrested on the street on November 4. The Punjab government has claimed that Jaggi is among a group of four suspects arrested on allegations of fanning communal disturbance in the state. The shocked and concerned community in the UK have urged the Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson to intervene and have his rights as a British citizen protected. His brother Gurpreet Singh, 32, who travelled to London from Scotland, told protesters
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outside FCO told the government has failed to act on the case and accused it of stripping Sikhs of their rights. He said: "They have got a duty to a British citizen. He's British by birth, he's not British by acquired nationality." Using a megaphone to address the crowd, he added: "He has lived 30 years of his life in this country, if this is happening to him what rights do we have as British citizens?" Supporter Shinda Singh, 64, travelled with more than 70 others from Birmingham to demand action from the Foreign Office. Continued on page 16
Modi remains very popular: Pew Research
Three years into Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's fiveyear tenure, the leader finds his relation with the people just as vibrant as it was when he took
office. Main findings of a survey conducted by the Pew Research Center conducted among 2,464 respondents in India, reveal that nearly nine in Continued on page 26
Mallya's extradition hearing to start on Dec 4
Indian businessman Vijay Mallya insists all allegations of money laundering against him are “baseless and fabricated”. Addressing the media after leaving a London
courthouse, the ex-chairman of United Spirits said, “Come to court Continued on page 26 More reports on page 18