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Loss Of Faith: How The Air India Bombers Got Away With Murder
 
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Loss Of Faith: How The Air India Bombers Got Away With Murder [Hardcover]

Kim Bolan
1.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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He Air-India bombing in 1985 stood at the time not only as the worst terrorist incident in Canadian history but as the most deadly aviation attack in the world. Twenty years later the perpetrators of the attack remain largely unpunished. The failure to detect, prevent, or effectively prosecute the perpetrators of the attack is a stark indictment of Canada's criminal justice system. The failures are the more remarkable given the extensive warning signs that were available to politicians and law enforcement personnel before the attacks. The Canadian government was repeatedly urged by Sikh moderates and other South Asians to crack down on Sikh militants who made no secret of their endorsement of violence to secure a "free" Punjab or Khalistan. Instead politicians rewarded militant platforms, and such was the ease with which extremists secured admission to this country that Sikhs with no political affiliations were known to use bogus claims of militant links to secure successful refugee claims.
Canadians who follow the news cannot help but be familiar with the debacle that was the Air-India investigation, but Bolan's account is still astonishing in terms of the sheer magnitude of the incompetence it lays bare. The Air-India bombing was simply the most dramatic and lethal of the actions of Sikh militants; there were many other occasions on which law enforcement agencies might have intervened to prosecute a pattern of violence, intimidation of Sikh moderates and others who criticised their activities. Bolan, winner of the 1999 Courage in Journalism Award for her coverage of the issue, was herself under regular police protection. The militants were not shy to advertise their intentions and didn't hesitate to literally wave their swords in the air in public demonstrations. In multicultural Canada this invited no sanction.
Bolan provides a detailed account of the background, the botched investigation, the failure to secure convictions in the recent trial and the devastating impact on the victims' families. What the book lacks is sufficient attention to the ‘why' of the failure of the justice system. This is unfortunate since Canada appears to have learned little from the experience; it continues to imperil Canadians through an immigration and refugee determination process that facilitates the relocation of foreign terrorist struggles to Canadian soil. A weak legal framework, a Charter-driven legal system, incoherent interagency investigation, and high-priced legal talent will serve the next generation of terrorists as well as they served the last. Canadian politicians remain more anxious to curry ethnic support than to defend Canada's integrity. Bolan underscores the difficulty of fighting "against powerful people with connections at the highest political level in Canada." The task of critical analysis is the more urgent since the agreement to an Air-India inquiry has been accompanied by terms of reference that ensure that while law enforcement agencies will receive further (and well-merited) opprobrium, the politicians, whose policies created the context, will be free from scrutiny.
Canada continues to give little attention to the potential security dangers posed by would-be immigrants and refugees. It fails to remove even those who are deemed a threat and whose claims are denied. Both the laws and their enforcement are inadequate in this country. It is salutary to recall that when Abdullah Khadr, alleged to have actively assisted Al Qaeda in Afghanistan, by, among other things, purchasing weapons that could be used against Canadian soldiers, recently returned to Canada from Pakistan, it was the FBI that sought his extradition to face charges under American law. The RCMP had the same information but had taken no action.

Martin Loney (Books in Canada)
-- Books in Canada

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Riveting and shocking, Loss of Faith is essential reading for all Canadians.

On June 23, 1985, Canada found itself on the international terrorism map when two bombs built in B.C. detonated within an hour of each other on opposite sides of the world, killing 329 men, women, and children.

Canadian Sikh separatists, upset at the Indian government for attacking their religion’s holiest shrine, the Golden Temple, were immediately suspected by the RCMP of perpetrating the worst act of aviation terrorism before Sept. 11, 2001. But while police agencies scrambled to infiltrate a close-knit immigrant community and collect evidence against the suspects, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service was destroying taped telephone calls between the same people the RCMP was investigating.

For years those at the centre of the terrorist plot tried to protect their dark secret. Two Sikh newspaper publishers who overheard an alleged confession by one of the bombers were assassinated. Other potential witnesses were threatened and intimidated. Journalists who wrote about the suspects were targeted by death threats and harassment. The suspects founded charities and participated in political parties, attending fundraising dinners for premiers and prime ministers. And the families of the victims fought to be recognized for their unimaginable loss as the result of an act of terrorism plotted in Canada. When charges were finally laid against three Sikh separatists, the families believed justice was almost theirs. But their faith was shaken when one suspect pleaded guilty to manslaughter and got a five-year sentence for more than three hundred deaths.

The Air-India trial judge spoke in his ruling of the “the senseless horror” of the bombings. He called the plot “a diabolical act of terrorism” with “roots in fanaticism at its basest and most inhumane level.” He then acquitted Sikh leaders Ripudaman Singh Malik and Ajaib Singh Bagri on all charges, leaving the victims’ families reeling and the biggest case in Canadian history officially unsolved.

Kim Bolan is an award-winning investigative reporter who has covered the Air-India bombing case since the day Flight 182 went down off the coast of Ireland. Her work on the Air-India story has taken her to Punjab five times over the last twenty years where she met with militant Sikh separatist leaders and victims of the violence. She also followed Air-India mastermind Talwinder Singh Parmar to Pakistan before his 1992 slaying and chased down other suspects in England and across Canada. But she faced the most danger at home in Vancouver where the stories she uncovered about the Air-India case led to a series of death threats against her.

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2 of 6 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Prejudiced, May 25 2008
The author displays prejudiced and biased opinions towards many events that took place and the Sikh community/culture in general. She consequently forms hints of racial profiling. She tends to separate and label a very strong, close knit, well established community into categories such as Moderates, Separatists, Extremists, Gangsters and fundamentalist. Fundamentalisms, Terrorism are just easy labels for herself and fellow prejudiced ensemble to use. That being said if you do read this book please research 'Anti British', Indian parties created during the uprising to Indian independence/partition. You will be surprised at whom the links of their creation point to. Pawn's in the play. These organizations (AKJ Babar Khalsa) are looked down upon by Sikh historians, religious bodies and even pro Khalistan supporters. They are internally considered non Sikh!
The fact remains the police and intelligence community have a lot to account for. May I also suggest 'Fighting for Faith and Nation' by Cynthia K Mahmood and 'reduced to ashes 'by Ram Narayan Kumar et al.
Regards,Ghengis
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Amazon.com: 3.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Who Bombed Air India?, Feb 12 2006
By Puneet S. Lamba - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Loss Of Faith: How The Air India Bombers Got Away With Murder (Hardcover)
Who Bombed Air India?

Perhaps no one is better acquainted with the details of the Air India case and the surrounding events than Kim Bolan. She had barely joined the Vancouver Sun newspaper as a rookie reporter when Air India Flight 182 exploded in the sky on July 23, 1985, killing all 329 on board. Ever since, Bolan has doggedly followed the case for two decades, making four trips to India and several visits to Pakistan, the U.S., and the U.K.

This book, the result of her long and arduous 'sewa' (service, p. 206), takes the reader through the backdrop, the bombing, and the tortuous investigation that climaxed in the twin trials and acquittals of two Vancouver-based Sikhs, Ripudaman Singh Malik and Ajaib Singh Bagri.

The entire episode is packed with ironies. Cowards like Bagri, who publicly called for the murder of 'fifty thousand Hindus' (p. 46), are roaming free. Meanwhile, the few who demonstrated the courage to expose the violence and hatred were either assassinated or are living under death threats.

Tara Singh Hayer was the founding editor of the vernacular weekly Indo-Canadian Times. A failed attempt on his life on August 28, 1988, just days after he published his 'most pointed reference to Bagri' (p. 196), left him in a wheelchair. Harkirat Singh Bagga told the police that 'Bagri had provided him with the .357-caliber revolver he had used to shoot Hayer' (p. 191).

Tarsem Singh Purewal, publisher of the British Punjabi-language newspaper Des Pardes, was assassinated in 1995 after he 'wrote an article that was extremely critical of the I.S.Y.F. [International Sikh Youth Federation] and promised more exposés on the Babbar Khalsa' (p. 195).

'Rani Kumar' (not her real name) was the star witness against Malik. A note she had tucked into her journal said that 'if she were found dead, she had not committed suicide' (p. 153).

Many of the Sikhs at the forefront on both sides of the equation were 'born again' Sikhs. That is, they had shed the orthodox external regalia, including unshorn hair and turbans, only to reacquire the symbols in the religiously hyper-charged milieu following Operation Bluestar. (Bluestar was the Indian army's 1984 offensive on the Darbar Sahib or Golden Temple complex at Amritsar, Punjab, a Sikh Vatican of sorts.) Examples include Talwinder Singh Parmar, Bagri, and Hayer.

As the book makes clear, Canadian federal authorities might never have laid many of the related charges (e.g. against Malik's Khalsa School) had they not been repeatedly shamed into doing so by Bolan's proactive investigative journalism.

Inderjit Singh Reyat is the only person ever to have been convicted in connection with this case. He was convicted for manslaughter for making the bombs that destroyed two Air India craft, including Kanishka (Flight 182). The revolver used to shoot Hayer and the one found illegally in Reyat's possession were both traced back to the same source in California (p. 215).

Malik would surely not wish to be judged by the company he kept. The first three witnesses who took the stand in his defense were 'proven by the Crown [prosecution] to have a history of lying' (p. 328). One defense witness for Malik, Raminder Singh 'Mindy' Bhandher, admitted to having thrown rocks through the living room window of prosecution witness Narinder Gill in 1997 to keep him from disclosing financial irregularities at Malik's Khalsa School (p. 326). Another defense witness, Satwant Singh Sandhu, admitted to having made an on-air death threat against Bolan (p. 327).

Malik himself had 'lied under oath' at the hearing in connection with the funding for his legal defense for the Air India trial (p. 282).

According to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (R.C.M.P.), 'all [prosecution witnesses] had passed lie-detector tests that the defence witnesses had not had to take' (p. 349). The judge, Ian Josephson, declared defense witness Reyat to be 'an unmitigated liar under oath' (p. 339).

The prosecution, the defense, and the judge all 'accepted that Talwinder Parmar had masterminded the bombings' (p. 339). But if Parmar, the chief of the Babbar Khalsa, was the 'mastermind,' then how are Bagri, Parmar's self-acknowledged deputy (p. 315), and Malik, the Babbar Khalsa's primary financier (p. 32), to be regarded as innocent?

Given all of the above, it is no small miracle that Kim Bolan actually survived long enough to document her detailed findings. And for that we should all be grateful.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Terrorism wth Justice Gone Crazy, Mar 5 2006
By John Matlock "Gunny" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Loss Of Faith: How The Air India Bombers Got Away With Murder (Hardcover)
An exceptional investigative report of terrorism perpetrated by militant Sikhs in Canada.

Kim Bolan was a cub reporter for The Vancouver Sun in 1985 when a bomb exploded on Air-India Flight 182 flying from Toronto, Canada to New Delhi, India. The plane exploded off the coast of Ireland killing all 329 passengers and crew aboard. Another bomb exploded at the airport in Narita, Japan killing two baggage handlers; this bomb was intended for another flight to India. The bombing was in retaliation for the attack by the Indian Army on the Golden Temple in Amristar, Punjab, Sikhism's holiest shrine in India.

The author of this fascinating book followed the incident for 20 years and became intimately involved with the families of the victims. She also became so knowledgeable about the terrorist perpetrators that her life was threatened. She lays responsibility for the tragedy on the extremist element of the Sikhs and on the Canadian government. Inept Canadian authorities, she says, failed to protect the innocent citizens of Indian descent and, 20 years later, the justice system failed to punish the guilty.

0 of 4 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Prejudiced, May 25 2008
By AttilaHun "Ghengis" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Loss of Faith: How the Air-India Bombers Got Away With Murder (Paperback)
The author displays prejudiced and biased opinions towards many events that took place and the Sikh community/culture in general. She consequently forms hints of racial profiling. She tends to separate and label a very strong, close knit, well established community into categories such as Moderates, Separatists, Extremists, Gangsters and fundamentalist. Fundamentalisms, Terrorism are just easy labels for herself and fellow prejudiced ensemble to use. That being said if you do read this book please research 'Anti British', Indian parties created during the uprising to Indian independence/partition. You will be surprised at whom the links of their creation point to. Pawn's in the play. These organizations (AKJ Babar Khalsa) are looked down upon by Sikh historians, religious bodies and even pro Khalistan supporters. They are internally considered non Sikh!
The fact remains the police and intelligence community have a lot to account for. May I also suggest 'Fighting for Faith and Nation' by Cynthia K Mahmood and 'reduced to ashes 'by Ram Narayan Kumar et al.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 3 reviews  3.7 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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