In a jolt to pro-Khalistan groups in the US, the Obama administration refused to declare the 1984 anti-Sikh riots in India as genocide, but noted that grave human rights violations had occurred.
The White House response in this regard came months after a section of the Sikh community in the US launched an online petition campaign urging the Obama Administration to recognise the 1984 riots as genocide.
The petition created on 15 November, 2012, had generated more than 30,000 signatures within weeks. Each petition that crosses the threshold of 25,000 signatures is reviewed and receive a response.
‘During and after the 1984 violence, the United States monitored and publicly reported on the grave human rights violations that occurred and the atrocities committed against members of the Sikh community,’ the White House response said.
It noted that the US State Department’s Official Country Reports on Human Rights Practices, for example, covered the violence and its aftermath in detail, with sections on political killings, disappearances, denial of fair public trials, negative effects on freedom of religion, and the government’s response to civil society organisations investigating allegations of human rights violations.
‘We continue to condemn violence directed at people for their religious affiliation. US Government efforts to protect the rights and freedoms of all people,’ White House said.
The White House response in this regard came months after a section of the Sikh community in the US launched an online petition campaign urging the Obama Administration to recognise the 1984 riots as genocide.
The petition created on 15 November, 2012, had generated more than 30,000 signatures within weeks. Each petition that crosses the threshold of 25,000 signatures is reviewed and receive a response.
‘During and after the 1984 violence, the United States monitored and publicly reported on the grave human rights violations that occurred and the atrocities committed against members of the Sikh community,’ the White House response said.
It noted that the US State Department’s Official Country Reports on Human Rights Practices, for example, covered the violence and its aftermath in detail, with sections on political killings, disappearances, denial of fair public trials, negative effects on freedom of religion, and the government’s response to civil society organisations investigating allegations of human rights violations.
‘We continue to condemn violence directed at people for their religious affiliation. US Government efforts to protect the rights and freedoms of all people,’ White House said.