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Bhagat Singh’s ninetieth demise anniversary: New ebook explores British tyranny and a ‘trial’ that wasn’t

Ninety years after Bhagat Singh, Rajguru and Sukhdev had been hanged by the British on March 23, 1931, a brand new ebook, ‘The Execution of Bhagat Singh: Heresies of the Raj’ throws mild on the “trial” that wasn’t.
Trial, which means a technique of regulation that’s adopted in courtroom the place a choose decides if an individual is responsible or not after completely listening to all sides, going by the evidences and giving an equal likelihood to the accused to current his/her facet and to have a authorized consultant, and that’s what 23-year-old Bhagat Singh and his companions had been gravely denied by the oppressive British authorities which hanged them to demise at Lahore Jail (now in Pakistan).
Written by Satvinder Singh Juss, a regulation professor at King’s College, London, a barrister-at-law practising from London and a former Human Rights fellow at Harvard Law School, USA, the ebook refers to a dozen unseen paperwork associated to the trial.
Bhagat Singh and his companions confronted trial in two circumstances: the Central Legislative Assembly Bombing Case in April 1929 (Delhi), and for the homicide of British police officer John Saunders on December 17, 1928 (Lahore conspiracy case). In the primary case, he was sentenced to 14 years’ imprisonment, and within the second, to demise.
Speaking to The Indian Express, creator Satvinder Singh Juss says, “The book is an attempt to document each and every detail and legal aspect of the one-sided, biased and a farcical trial which led to the hanging of Bhagat Singh, Rajguru and Sukhdev. A group of lawyers had tried really hard to save them but they are hardly talked about. The book also details their fight, struggle and ordeal they went through while fighting against the British. One among them was Amolak Ram Kapoor from Lahore who had fought a long battle to save Bhagat Singh and we managed to access his diary entries through his granddaughter. I have described in my book how Kapoor writes in his diary that because of the British, ‘India is becoming poorer day by day…The aliens have sucked off all the blood and vitality that was ever to be found.’ The book has many such documents which throw light on the legal aspects of the trial that was unfair in every aspect.” Juss says that whereas writing the ebook, he learnt of the “full-extent of the illegality and the denial of the rule of law in the trial and execution of Bhagat Singh”.
“This is because the trial had earlier been taking place before a proper magistrate in Lahore for a period of 10 months. From there it was shifted after over 200 witnesses had already being examined, and put before a ‘Special Tribunal’ convened under an unlawfully passed ‘Lahore Ordinance III of 1930’. This was done by Governor-General, Lord Irwin, despite the fact that Irwin could provide no evidence of a danger to ‘peace and good governance’ which was a pre-condition for the setting up of a Special Tribunal under the Lahore Ordinance III of 1930. Bhagat Singh, Rajguru, and Sukhdev were then hanged following an appeal to the London Privy Council, but which wrongly refused to hear the appeal in full, even though it was by that stage argued by renowned London Counsel, D N Pritt, who subsequently then went onto argue all the anti-colonial cases during the final phase of British Empire,” says Juss. The ebook additionally comprises over 100 pictures of unseen paperwork.

The creator says, “There is a full 4-page document ‘challenge to jurisdiction’. On the very first day of the Special Tribunal’s sitting on May 5, 1930, Bhagat Singh and his lawyers had submitted, ‘We believe that freedom is the undeniable right of all people, that every man has the inalienable right of enjoying the fruits of his labour and that every nation is indisputably the master of its resources.’ The same letter throws the challenge before colonial rule with words, ‘We believe all such governments and particularly this British government thrust upon the helpless but unwilling Indian nation to be no better than an organised gang of robbers and a pack of exploiters equipped with all the means of carnage and devastations.’ Kuldip Nayar, journalist and former Indian High Commissioner to London, believed that not only was the Tribunal rigged but the Privy Council in London was rigged, and that one day secret telegrams will reveal that they were under instructions to reject the appeal of Bhagat Singh against the death sentence.”

“Documents exhibiting that the president of the Tribunal refused interviews of the accused with their kin (thus making it troublesome for the accused to arrange their defence) have been proven for this primary time on this ebook.
The elimination of two of the three judges on the similar time (one in every of whom was the Indian choose, Agha Haider, who favoured the accused) ‘for reasons of ill-health’ inside two weeks of the Tribunal convening, have been proven for the primary time,” he provides.
The Lahore Conspiracy Trial stays probably the most controversial trials of the British India, and the controversy continues.

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