SKY NEWS COVERS THE PETITION IN THE AUSTRALIAN PARLIAMENT IN REGARDS TO THE 1984 SIKH GENOCIDE
Hundreds of Sikhs visit the Australian parliament on the 28th anniversary of the Delhi pogroms as protests took place in India.
Protesters took to the streets in Delhi to mark the anniversary
An Australian MP has called for the country to recognise the killing of more than 37,000 Sikhs in India in 1984 as a genocide.
Warren Entsch tabled a petition of more than 4,000 signatures, calling
for the government to recognise "that an organised campaign of horrific
violence took place against Sikhs in November 1984".Around 300 Australian Sikhs sat in the parliament's public gallery to see the motion be put forward on the 28th anniversary of the events.
It calls for the violence, rape and killings to be recognised formally and urges the Indian government to bring those responsible for organising the campaign of violence to justice.
He paid tribute to the growing and affluent Sikh community who have been a "vibrant part of the Australian cultural mosaic since 1897".
He said he felt it was the right thing to do after being told about Sikh culture, tradition and religion by his friend Daljit Singh, adding: "That is why I commenced this journey two years ago and I hope our aims will be taken in that context."
It is the first time such a petition about the controversial killing of thousands of Sikhs has been put forward outside of the sub-continent.
In August 2005, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh apologised in the Indian parliament for the attacks and forced the resignation of Congress minister Jagdish Tytler, who is alleged to have been involved.
The orchestrated violence against Sikhs in the capital Delhi took place after the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi by two of her Sikh bodyguards on October 31, 1984.
Her death came five months after she ordered the Indian army to storm the holy Harimandir Sahib (or Golden Temple) complex in Amritsar and other Sikh places of worship in the Punjab where armed Sikhs were seeking redress for their grievances.
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