INDEPTH: AIR
INDIA
The Bombing of Air
India Flight 182
Michael
McAuliffe and Peter Hadzipetros, CBC News Online |
Updated August 27, 2003 June 22, 1985. Airlines
agent Jeannie Adams checks in two pieces of luggage at
Vancouver International Airport that will change the
course of history.
Hours later, the first
suitcase explodes inside the baggage terminal at the
Tokyo's Narita airport while it was being transferred to
an Air India flight. Two baggage handlers are killed.
Exactly 55 minutes later, the other bag, a dark-brown
hard-sided Samsonite suitcase, explodes in the forward
cargo hold of Air India Flight 182 as it approaches the
coast of Ireland.
Some passengers actually
survive the 747's fall from 31,000 feet only to drown in
the frigid waters of the Atlantic.
Three hundred
and twenty-nine people are killed. Eighty-two of them
are children. Most of the people onboard Air India
Flight 182 are Canadian citizens.
Anant
Anantaraman lost his wife and two daughters in the Air
India tragedy. Both his little girls, he says were very
talented violinists. For years after the crash Anant
found it impossible to listen to music. Each June he
marks the anniversary of their death ... and each June
he hopes the nation will remember this was not a foreign
tragedy ... most of the victims were Canadians.
"I want the public to remember these people,"
Anantaraman told CBC News.
 Mourners gather on the coast of
Ireland to pay their respects to Air India
victims |
"I would like to see Canadians understand that this
is not a local tragedy, it's not a tragedy that happened
to me and a few people. I want them to understand it's a
national tragedy, which has never been sort of
resolved."
Anant has given up on the promises of
Canadian police to bring those responsible to justice.
In 1998, he says, the RCMP told him that charges were
imminent.
Nothing happened publicly in the two
years after that. But the investigation picked up steam
behind the scenes. Six months later, crown prosecutors
were brought on board to begin reviewing the 15 years
worth of evidence gathered by police. Soon a team of 14
prosecutors and 20 police officers were at work on the
case full-time.
As the investigation headed into
the homestretch, police left nothing to chance. They
refused to publicly discuss either their theory or
possible suspects in the case. Their caution could have
stemmed from the fact that aside from being the longest,
most complicated and expensive investigation in Canadian
history, there was a widespread belief that the
investigation was botched from the very beginning.
That's because Canadian authorities were on to
the suspects in this case long before the crime was ever
committed.
In early 1985, Indian Prime Minister
Rajiv Gandhi was getting ready to visit North America.
India asked Canada and the United States to keep close
tabs on Sikh militants who might pose a security threat.
Many Sikhs around the world were furious over the Indian
Government's 1984 assault on the Golden Temple at
Amritsar, Sikhism's holiest shrine. Prime Minister Brian
Mulroney agreed to India's request.
 Talwinder Singh Parmar
|
Security officials placed a British Columbia man
named Talwinder Singh Parmar under round-the-clock
surveillance. Parmar was the leader of the militant
Babbar Khalsa sect, a group committed to the violent
establishment of Khalistan, an independent Sikh homeland
in the Punjab. Agents followed Parmar's every move, and
tapped his phones.
Three weeks before the Air
India bombing, agents following Parmar and another man,
Inderjit Singh Reyat, into the woods on Vancouver
Island. There was a loud bang. But the agents thought
little of it. Later, most of Parmar's taped telephone
conversations were erased before anyone ever listened to
them.
 Inderjit Singh Reyat
|
Two days before the bombings, police say a man of
East Indian descent went to the Canadian Pacific
Airlines ticket office in downtown Vancouver. He paid
cash for two tickets. Both were registered under the
last name "Singh." One ticket was booked to go to the
Narita airport in Tokyo and then on to India. The other
ticket was booked from Vancouver to connect with Air
India Flight 182 flying out of Toronto.
Police
believe that man, whoever he was, was working with
Parmar and a group of others. But in one of the biggest
gaffes of the case, there was no surveillance on Parmar
the day police believe the bombs were delivered to the
Vancouver airport.
In the aftermath of the
bombings, the pressure was on to lay charges fast.
Within a few months, RCMP officers raided the
homes of a half-dozen prominent Sikhs in British
Columbia. Charges were laid against two men: Talwinder
Singh Parmar and Inderjit Singh Reyat, the mechanic
Parmar had visited on Vancouver Island. They were
charged with minor weapons offences, but the police left
no doubt as to why these suspects were being charged.
They told a news conference that the raids and arrests
were made as part of the investigation into the Narita
Airport blast and the downing of Air India Flight 182.
The police, however, had acted prematurely. The
charges against Parmar were dropped. Reyat was fined
$2,000 and released. In exchange for that little piece
of justice, the police had publicly shown their hand to
their key suspects in the case.
For the next 15
years, the Air India investigation languished. The most
police were able to manage was the 1991 conviction of
Inderjit Singh Reyat in the Narita bombing case. Police
presented evidence-linking components of the bomb
remains found in Tokyo with items Reyat had purchased in
the preceding weeks. Among them, a Sanyo stereo tuner
that police believe housed the Narita bomb.
Reyat is serving 10 years for manslaughter in
the deaths of the two baggage handlers at the Tokyo
airport. He insists he's innocent.
"I never deny
buying some items," Reyat told CBC News. "I bought the
tuner right and gave it to someone else. I don't know
what happened after that. But I did not make the bomb or
know of anybody who asked me to make a bomb."
Reyat himself is able to provide one of the most
interesting glimpses inside the police investigation
over the past few years. Ultimately, police have always
hoped to lay conspiracy charges against everyone
involved in the Air India bombing. The best way to do
that is with the co-operation of one of the conspirators
and Reyat says police have offered him just about
everything in exchange for this co-operation.
Reyat says he was offered $1,000,000 for his
testimony. That's the amount of the reward police have
offered for information leading to convictions in the
case. Presumably, the same offer has been made to the
half dozen or so other suspect's police have in mind.
Defence lawyer David Gibbons has at one time as
represented Parmar, Reyat and a number of other
suspected Sikh terrorists in Canada. He hopes police
would think twice before basing any Air India
prosecution on bought testimony.
"You could get
a lot of people to say anything for that kind of money,"
Gibbons told CBC News. "You can't buy evidence in our
system of justice and get away with it unless it's
corroborated by other evidence. But I think more
important it demonstrated that the police really needed
something badly, they didn't have their case, they
didn't have the evidence gathered and they were trying
to get it anyway they could."
Nevertheless, in
October, 2000 charges were laid against Sikh cleric
Ajaib Singh Bagri and millionaire businessman Ripudaman
Singh Malik. Bagri, from Kamloops, B.C., and Malik, from
Vancouver, were charged with murder, attempted murder
and conspiracy.
Then on June 04, 2001 the
British government agreed to allow Canadian authorities
to charge Inderjit Singh Reyat in connection with the
bombing. As a British citizen already extradited to
Canada for his trial on the Narita charges, Britain had
to agree before these further charges could go ahead.
After the British courts approved a waiver of
extradition rights, RCMP formally arrested Reyat on
seven new charges including, murder, attempted murder,
conspiracy in the Air India bombing, and the explosion
at Tokyo's Narita Airport.
The authorities have
been gearing up for the largest prosecution in Canadian
history. The trial, like the investigation before it, is
likely to be a judicial record-breaker. Pre-trial
arguments over the admissibility of evidence such as
wiretaps, or material that spent months sitting on the
ocean floor, could take more than a year. The trial
could last two to three years.
So far, the trial
has faced one setback after another. The RCMP's key
suspect is no longer alive. Talwinder Singh Parmar died
in 1992 under suspicious circumstances, the result of an
alleged gun battle with Indian police. Problems with
Reyat's defence team have forced the trial to be
postponed twice.
It took months before Reyat was
appointed a lawyer. David Martin finally came on in
September 2001. A few months later, the presiding judge
postponed the trial from February 2002 to November 2002,
in order to include Reyat's trial with Malik's and
Bagri's.
In May 2002, the trial was postponed to
March 2003 after most of the lawyers on Reyat's defence
team resigned because of alleged fraudulent billing by
Reyat's children. Two of Reyat's adult children had been
employed to do clerical work on the case.
Shortly after the resignations, Reyat's former
defence lawyer, Gibbons, took over as lead lawyer.
Gibbons defended Reyat at his 1991 trial for
manslaughter in the deaths of two Japanese baggage
handlers killed by a bomb at the Narita Airport.
Then on February 10, 2003, in a dramatic turn of
events, Reyat pleaded guilty to one count of
manslaughter and a charge of aiding in the construction
of a bomb. All other charges against him were stayed and
he was sentenced to five years in jail for his role. He
had been charged with the murder of the 329 people. His
guilty plea raised speculation that he would testify
against the other two.
The outcome doesn't
matter for one Canadian who lost his family. Anant
Anantaraman says he no longer cares.
"It doesn't
make any difference, I swear," Anantaraman told CBC
News. "I'm totally indifferent to this, whether they
catch, whether they find, whether they punish. It
doesn't matter to me at all. Because after all what has
happened to me and what has happened to others, it
cannot be reversed."