...
...
Next Story

Malik 'gave money' to Babbar Khalsa

Ripudaman Singh Malik had been the main accused in '85 A-I bombing case and was acquitted after a lengthy trial. Special: The Kanishka Bombing

Updated on: Mar 30, 2006 09:20 PM IST
None | By , Vancouver
Prefer HTon Google
Advertisement

Ripudaman Singh Malik, the main accused in the Air-India (A-I) bombing case has admitted donating money to militant group Babbar Khalsa International (BKI) before the 1985 downing of the airline's Kanishka flight that left 329 people dead.

HT Image
HT Image

Malik was acquitted after a lengthy trial in the Air-India bombing case.

"BKI was not considered a terrorist group back in 1985," Malik said in an affidavit read out at the BC Supreme Court on Tuesday.

"I have no recollection of having made the $100 contribution, but I assume it would have been in the nature of a charitable donation," Malik said in the affidavit in a reference to a BKI membership form that bears his signature.

Malik, a businessman, is fighting an order of Financial Institutions Commission to remove him as a director of the Khalsa Credit Union on the grounds of terrorist links and misleading information he supplied to a Supreme Court hearing on his application to get legal aid in the Air-India case.

But lawyer Ravi Hira, who was representing the Government regulator, said Malik's bias claim was ridiculous and that the Commission was just doing its job by probing his suitability after a number of serious issues were raised about him.

While Justice Ian Bruce Josephson acquitted Malik in the terrorism case, he accepted that late Talwinder Singh Parmar — the Babbar Khalsa founder — was the plot's mastermind.

Malik gave money to both Talwinder Parmar and the Babbar Khalsa, Hira told the court on Tuesday.

 
Check India news real-time updates, latest news on Hindustan Times and more across India.
Check India news real-time updates, latest news on Hindustan Times and more across India.
SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON