Gurmit Singh Aulakh

Gurmit Singh Aulakh
Dr. Gurmit Singh Aulakh
Born January 30, 1938
Lyallpur, British India
Occupation President of the Council of Khalistan
Religion Sikh

Gurmit Singh Aulakh is the self-appointed President of Council of Khalistan, a small organization that claims to "non-violently support" the Khalistan Movement. He is known to have close ties with many Khalistani groups and has cooperated closely with Syed Ghulam Nabi Fai, accused by the FBI in July 2011 to be an agent of the Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI).[1]

Contents

Khalistan movement

Lobbying and political connections

Dr. Aulakh has been a lobbyist for the Khalistan cause and was able to temporarily receive occasional "support" from a few politicians in the US and UK.

  • Edolphus Towns, member of the U.S. House of Representatives, from New York. He has been a "supporter" of Khalistan and Nagalim. Towns also wanted to "declare India a terrorist state" because of "the pattern of Indian terrorism against its minorities", an allegation that was summarily dismissed by the White House.[2]
  • Dan Burton, member of the United States House of Representatives from Indiana. He was a supporter of "an independent Kashmir and Khalistan" but has distanced himself from both since 9/11
  • Jesse Helms, former five-term Republican U.S. Senator from North Carolina. About two decades ago, he had circumvented the State Department's refusal of a visa to separatist Khalistan activist Jagjit Singh Chauhan by inviting him to testify before a Senate agriculture committee he headed.[3]
  • Lord Avebury, a member of the British House of Lords.

Anti-India Legislative Attempts

Aulakh and his supporters have been active in introducing anti-India legislations and have opposed aid to India, without achieving any changes any U.S. policy to India.

In 1997, HR 182, the Human Rights in India Act, was sponsored by Rep. Dan Burton (R-IN) and Rep. Gary Condit (D-CA). to cut-off U.S. development aid to India until the president certifies to Congress that India has taken "certain steps to prevent human rights abuses" in India. Another resolution, H. Con. Res. 37, sponsored by Condit and Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA) called for an internationally-supervised plebiscite in Punjab on the question of independence for the region. The act secured the support of only 82 members while 342 voted against it. Gurmit Singh Aulakh was involved in these legislations.[4][5]

Almost none of these legislations have had any major effect. Dan Burton beat a hasty retreat again in the House of Representatives in August 1999, withdrawing his amendment seeking a 25 per cent cut in the US development aid to India, in the face of an overwhelming opposition. Burton could line up only two lawmakers to speak in his favor. On the other hand, at least 21 Congressmen successfully resisted the anti-India proposal. The opposition to the anti-India measure was so strong that Burton withdrew instead facing a decisive defeat on the floor.[5]

Accusations of Obtaining Signatures by Deception

Aulakh faced accusations of obtaining signatures by deception in 2002 from US House Foreign Policy Aides when a publication on US Congress, The Hill stated that a legislative assistant to a Republican Congressman misled her office by implying to a staff member that the Congressman, John Shimkus, had agreed to sign a letter to the President calling for release of political prisoners in India.[6]

The Senior legislative assistant stated that Aulakh had already printed the letter with the name of the Congressman leaving a staff member to assume that the office had agreed to sign it.

The same publication also quoted one aide with ties to the 131-member Congressional India Caucus as saying that Aulakh had been getting away with tricking staffers into signing letters for several years.

Congressman Shimkus has written to the Committee on House Administration about the incident involving Dr Aulakh, urging action to warn members and their staff to be cautious when a letter is circulated by a representative of an outside organisation and not a Congressional staff member.[6]

See also

References

External links


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