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Kanishka probe: Fresh evidence sparks new debate

Fresh evidence in the inquiry into the 1985 Air India bombing that killed all 329 people on board has revealed that a better effort by Canadian Security and transport agencies could have averted the disaster.

Updated on: Feb 14, 2009 04:15 PM IST
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Fresh evidence in the inquiry into the 1985 Air India bombing that killed all 329 people on board has revealed that a better effort by Canadian Security and transport agencies could have averted the disaster.

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HT Image

The new documents - delivered to the inquiry committee by government officials last fall and made public this week - indicates that Transport Canada conducted only minimal monitoring of AI's security arrangements in the months leading up to the bombing, lawyers for the victim's family have said.

Other documents suggest AI managers themselves were confused about some security measures the day ill-fated Flight 182 left Toronto.

The documents also strengthen previous evidence showing the Canadian Security Intelligence Service was hindered by a bureaucratic "quagmire" in its efforts to tap the phones of suspected Sikh extremists prior to the bombing.

"What we're seeing in these documents is a validation and a confirmation of what some of our hunches was," Jacques Shore, one of the lawyers for the victims' families said.

The government's legal team has urged Justice Major to concentrate on forward-looking recommendations to bolster future anti-terrorism efforts.

 
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