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BBC News Online: World: South Asia


Wednesday, 6 June, 2001, 12:41 GMT 13:41 UK

Hardline Sikhs mourn militant hero


Sikh devotees at the Golden Temple, Amritsar
By Susannah Price in Delhi

Hundreds of Sikh hardliners have attended a prayer ceremony in the Indian city of Amritsar for the militant leader, Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale, on the 17th anniversary of his death.

Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale
Bhindranwale was killed when the Indian army stormed Amritsar's Golden Temple, attempting to flush out the armed militants sheltering there.

The hardline organisers said they have now carried out the last rites for Bhindranwale so they could formally declare him a martyr.

But observers believe the Sikh groups involved may want to revitalise their political movement, using Bhindranwale's memory to demand a separate state for the Sikhs.

Community split

Large numbers of plainclothes policemen, along with two magistrates, were deployed at the temple by the local administration for the ceremony.

The Golden Temple
Those attending the prayers were not allowed inside the most important building in the complex, the Akal Takht, and remained nearby.

They called for Bhindranwale's ideas, which focused on a separate Sikh homeland, to be taken forward.

But the decision to hold the last rites has split the Sikh community because Sikh moderates who are members of the seminary which Bhindranwale headed maintain he is still alive.

The head priest at the Golden Temple did not attend the last rites ceremony.

Earlier, the main Sikh bodies carried out their annual prayers in memory of all those who died during the army's 1984 attack - known as operation Blue Star.

For now, the moderates have achieved their most important objective of avoiding trouble with the hardliners - but there may well be further confrontations ahead.


Related to this story:
Operation Bluestar remembered (06 Jun 00 | South Asia) Sikh head priest sacked (29 Mar 00 | South Asia) Who are the Sikhs? (15 Apr 99 | South Asia) The Sikh Khalsa: Community of the Pure (14 Apr 99 | South Asia)


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