Sourabh
VIP
AMRITSAR: Dal Khalsa has announced a Punjab Bandh on November 3 to mark the 25th anniversary of the Genocide of Sikhs carried out under the brahmanical rulers of India and not without passive nod of the RSS-BJP.
The party has appealed to the Akal Takht, the ruling Shiromani Akali Dal, the Khalsa Action Committee, the Damdami Taksal, and the Shiromani Gurdwara Prabandhak Committee to lend support to the Bandh.
Party spokesperson Kanwarpal Singh said emergency services will be exempted but it will be ensured that the Bandh is complete.
“The Dal Khalsa appeals to people of all religions, race and creed to join the Bandh and support it for the larger humanitarian cause of justice for those innocents who were killed in the communal carnage aimed at obliterating Sikhism and teaching a lesson to the Sikhs,” Dal Khalsa said.
So far, the Punjab Government of Akali Dal-BJP has not made its stand clear on the issue of the Bandh. Punjab CM Prakash Singh Badal has not even mentioned the occasion publicly even once though Sikhs around the world have been making preparations to mark the event in such a way as to send a message to New Delhi as well as the larger world community that the Sikh Nation is neither prepare to forget, nor to forgive the carnage.
The party has appealed to the Akal Takht, the ruling Shiromani Akali Dal, the Khalsa Action Committee, the Damdami Taksal, and the Shiromani Gurdwara Prabandhak Committee to lend support to the Bandh.
Party spokesperson Kanwarpal Singh said emergency services will be exempted but it will be ensured that the Bandh is complete.
“The Dal Khalsa appeals to people of all religions, race and creed to join the Bandh and support it for the larger humanitarian cause of justice for those innocents who were killed in the communal carnage aimed at obliterating Sikhism and teaching a lesson to the Sikhs,” Dal Khalsa said.
So far, the Punjab Government of Akali Dal-BJP has not made its stand clear on the issue of the Bandh. Punjab CM Prakash Singh Badal has not even mentioned the occasion publicly even once though Sikhs around the world have been making preparations to mark the event in such a way as to send a message to New Delhi as well as the larger world community that the Sikh Nation is neither prepare to forget, nor to forgive the carnage.