1984 SIKHS GENODICE REMEMBERANCE IN TORONTO – A truck and automobile rally commemorating the “1984 Sikh Genocide” was organized by the separatist organization Sikhs For Justice (SFJ), drawing the participation of more than 8,000 Sikhs and, at one point, halting traffic on the motorways leading into downtown Toronto.
Hundreds of famous Canadian trucks, flying flags of Khalistan and holding banners condemning the 1984 Sikh slaughter, caused traffic jams on the major highway and dozens of connecting highways.
Vehicles carrying flags moved slowly along the roadway, causing backups. Sikh child burned to death by Hindu rioters, according to truck placards. To draw attention to the 1984 genocide of the Sikhs, the trucks transported symbolic coffins throughout the world.
The removal of the really comes one week before the second phase of the Khalistan Referendum, which will be conducted on November 6th in Mississauga by Sikhs for Justice (SFJ) and during which tens of thousands of Sikhs are anticipated to cast their ballots at Paul Coffee Arena.
More than 111,000 Sikhs supported the Khalistan Referendum in the first voting round on September 18.
SFJ General Counsel and Founder Gurpatwant Singh Pannun called the effort to eradicate the Sikh people and their faith in 1984 the “Sikh Genocide,” one of the worst atrocities in human history.
He said, “Khalistan, the Sikh homeland, shall be the genuine justice for the Sikh people.” The Sikhs advocate for a referendum to decide the future of Punjab’s political and cultural ties to India in order to free the region from Indian rule.
The RSS-BJP governments, according to Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, are promoting a narrative that would result in another Genocide of Sikhs in India. ‘The previous Indian administrations utilized violence against Sikh sovereignty to stifle the independence movement, but now is the time for the community to vote in Referendum to establish an independent Sikh homeland Khalistan,’ he went on.
After Indira Gandhi was assassinated on October 31, 1984, the Sikh population in India was targeted in a series of coordinated assaults that had the tacit approval of the government and police.
Nearly the course of several days, the violence against the Sikhs spread to more than a hundred cities throughout India, where it left behind a trail of destruction that included the burning of hundreds of Gurudwaras and the displacement of over three million Sikhs.
Multiple reports by international human rights organizations, including the most recent one, “Mass Violence Against the Sikh People in India: The Events of November 1984 – A Case of Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity (updated October 2022)” by the UK-based Global Diligence LLP, an international law and human rights compliance group, make it abundantly clear that the violence committed against Sikhs in November 1984 was genocide.