Indian police capture Khalistan Sikh nonconformist in move against Khalistan development
NEW DELHI: Indian police have captured Sikh rebel Amritpal Singh in the wake of looking for him for over a month, a state police official said on Sunday, a move against the restoration of a free country in the territory of Punjab lining Pakistan.
The ascent of Singh, an evangelist in the northwestern territory of Punjab where Sikhs are in the greater part, has resuscitated discuss Khalistan — a free Sikh country — and stirred up fears of a re-visitation of viciousness that killed huge number of individuals during the 1980s and mid 1990s during a Sikh revolt.
"Amritpal Singh has been captured from the Rode town in Moga locale, Punjab based on unambiguous knowledge," Sukhchain Singh Gill, a high ranking representative of the Punjab police told columnists.
The capture of Amritpal Singh, 30 — who drives a gathering called Waris Punjab De (the beneficiaries of Punjab) — comes after the so called minister and many his allies raged a police headquarters with blades and guns, requesting the arrival of one of his helpers.
Police have blamed Singh and his allies for endeavored murder, block of policing, making disharmony, and said he had been on the run since mid-Walk.
He was captured in the town gurudwara, a Sikh sanctuary, under the Public safety Act, which considers those considered a danger to public safety to be confined without energize for to a year, the police official said.
Gill said he would be moved to Dibrugarh, in the territory of Assam, where a portion of his partners are as of now in prison.
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