Amritsar March 14 (KMS) Dil Khalsa, a representative body of Sikhs, will hold a Punjab Summit in Amritsar on March 19 to present Punjab’s perspective on social, economic, educational, agricultural, human rights and political aspects to 20 countries.
The Punjab summit will be held on March 15 to 17 and again on March 19 and 20 on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Amritsar. The organization has written letters to the heads of diplomatic missions of all 19 countries in Delhi before the arrival of the delegates in Amritsar.
Dal Khalsa spokesperson Paramjit Singh Mand said. In a press briefing at the party office in Amritsar today, the summit will invite representatives of various Sikh organizations, institutions and farmers’ groups, as well as prominent personalities and subject experts as speakers, senior organization leader Kanwar Pal said. Singh said that the people of Punjab have many problems with New Delhi. He said that the Indian government is trying to present a good image in front of the world during its presidency which is actually completely opposite to the situation on the ground. He said that the situation here is terrible which needs the attention of the international community. He said that when it comes to Sikhs and other oppressed people, all claims of democracy and justice fall flat. Kanwar Pal Singh said that we are oppressed and we have no choice but to turn to the international community for support and intervention. There is no other way left.
He said that in the light of our discussions and negotiations and in the wider interest of the Panth and Punjab, a document will be prepared which will be sent to the G-20 countries for consideration. Among the topics that have been selected are the interference of the Indian state in the religious affairs of the Sikhs, the colonial and imperial rule of India in Punjab, the insults and human rights violations of the struggling citizens, indigenous peoples and minorities, the current situation under the influence of Hindutva. The Indian government’s adaptation of the education system to Hindutva ideology and the imposition of one language and one culture on religious and ethnic minorities, the state’s unjust and discriminatory treatment of political prisoners, state-sponsored immigrants to change the population ratio in Punjab., the impact of state policies on the agricultural economy of farmers, the opening of the Wagah border for trade and agricultural goods during the global food crisis, the role of traffickers, politicians and the police nexus in the promotion of drugs, the struggle for self-determination in Korea.
Declaring peace and order problem by and Refusal to recognize it as a political issue, continuous looting of natural resources including river waters in violation of the river principle, blackmailing or forcing the media to support the state position, spying on social media, groups and this includes banning and deactivating the social media accounts of individuals. Parmajit Singh Tanda, general secretary of the organization, said that we have no problem with visitors from all over the world and we welcome them. It is our responsibility to tell them that where peace and development go hand in hand, peace goes hand in hand with justice and equality. There cannot be peace where state oppression and injustice are the daily routine.