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Nickname(s) | Sukha Sipahi |
Allegiance | Khalistan Commando Force |
Years of service | 1984 - 1988 |
Rank | General (self-appointed) |
Battles / wars | Operation Blue Star, Khalistan movement (East Template:Lang-pa. He was involved in day-light attack on Director-General of the Punjab Police J.F. Ribeiro inside his headquarters. Also involved in daylight bank robbery of Rs 5.70 crore from the Punjab National Bank, Miller Gunj, Ludhiana, Pb, India etc. |
Labh Singh (or "General Labh Singh") was a former Punjab Police officer who took command of the Khalistan Commando Force after its founder, General Manbir Singh Chaheru, died in late 1980s . He was an associate of Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale and he had fought against Indian army during Operation Bluestar. He was credited for re-structuring Khalistan Commando Force with a fluid hierarchy. He was involved in the attack on the Director-General of the Punjab Police Julio Francis Ribeiro. He also took part in the Indian history's biggest bank robbery of Rs. 5.70 crore ($4.5 million) from Punjab National Bank, Miller Gunj branch, Ludhiana to finance violent campaign for a separate Sikh state of Khalistan..
Early life
Labh Singh's original name was Sukhdev Singh and he was also known as Sukha Sipahi. He was born in 1952 to Mr. Puran Singh and Mrs. Kulwant Kaur in the village of Panjwar, District Amritsar, Punjab, India. In 1980, he married Davinder Kaur according to Sikh rites and had two sons Rajashwar Singh and Pardeep Singh. He served in police force for 12 years.
Association with Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale
In 1983, after getting close to Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale, he deserted the police and joined the Sikh militants. In May 1984, he, along with Gursewak Singh Babla, Gurinder Singh and Swaranjit Singh, was accused of killing Hind Samachar newspaper group editor Ramesh Chander who was an outspoken critic of Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale and who wrote that Punjab state has become a slaughterhouse. As per a phone call received at Indian news agency afterwards, “it was notified that whoever speaks or writes against Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale will be answered with bullets”. During Operation Blue Star, he fought against Indian Army along with other Sikh militants. Arrested by the army after the operation, he was sent to Jodhpur Jail where he spent two years without trial.
Association with Khalistan Commando Force
He escaped from police cutody on April 25 1986 when Sikh militant leader Manbir Singh Chaheru and his associates attacked Indian security forces that were taking him to trail in the District courts of Jalandhar, Punjab, India. He along with Gurinder Singh and Swaranjit Singh, was to appear in court on charges of slaying Ramesh Chander, a leading Hindu newspaper editor. Militants freed all three prisoners. Four police officers were killed inside the District Court complex and two other officers were shot at the courtyard gate as the attackers fled. . 16 other armed court guards cowered in fear. As per police statement, the sentries were too terrified to fire back. Attackers also took away three rifles and a submachine gun of the slain officers.
After KCF's first commander-in-chief Manbir Singh Chaheru's arrest and alleged disappearance, Labh Singh took over the leadership of Khalistan Commando Force and re-created it with a fluid hierarchy, enabling it to accommodate any potential setbacks. He was the undisputed head of this force until his death. He appointed half a dozen Lieutenant Generals, each independent of each other, with each of them having Area Commanders. As such, the death of a Lieutenant General, for example, would result in the promotion of an Area Commander. After his death this organisation was headed by Kanwarjit Singh Sultanwind. After Kanwarjit Singh Sultanwind's death, Paramjeet Singh Panjwar became the General of his organisation.
He was involved in several police encounters including daylight attack on the Director-General of the Punjab Police Julio Francis Ribeiro on October 3, 1986 inside the headquarters of Punjab Armed Police in the city of Jalandhar, Punjab, India.
Along with Harjinder Singh Jinda, Sukhdev Singh Sukha and other militants of the Khalistan Commando Force, he also took part in the daylight robbery of the Punjab National Bank, Miller Gunj branch, Ludhiana in which more than Rs 5.70 crore (58 million rupees-$4.5 million) were looted, a part of which belonged to the Reserve Bank of India, India's central bank. Sikh militants often used bank robberies to finance their violent campaign against the Indian government..
Death and afterwards
He was killed in an exchange of fire with the police near Tanda, Hoshiarpur, Punjab, India (Faultlines, May 1999, vol. 1.1, p. 29, New Delhi: Institute of Conflict Management.). At the time of his death, he himself was wanted in connection with the murder of a dozen policemen, a newspaper editor Ramesh Chander, an attempt on the life of former Punjab Police Chief Julio Francis Ribeiro and a major Bank robbery of Ludhiana. Amritsar police Superintendent Suresh Arora declared that with his killing, police has broken the back of the KCF. His entire family was forced to migrate to Canada after his death though his father-in-law stayed on in Labh Singh's house. However, he committed suicide by jumping himself before a train after he was ‘mercilessly’ beaten up by the Punjab Police. The ancestral house of Sukha Sipahi, which remained abandoned for years after his killing, is occupied by his relatives now.
Preceded byManbir Singh Chaheru | Commander-in-Chief of Khalistan Commando Force 1986 – 1988 |
Succeeded byKanwarjit Singh Sultanwind |
References
- Fighting for Faith and Nation By Cynthia Keppley Mahmood - Page 155
- http://ir.lib.sfu.ca/retrieve/726/etd1604.pdf
- Encyclopedia of modern worldwide extremists and extremist groups by Stephen E. Atkins
- Fighting for faith and nation By Cynthia Keppley Mahmood
- http://www.tribuneindia.com/2008/20081010/punjab1.htm#11
- ^ http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/latimes/access/58240583.html?dids=58240583:58240583&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&date=Feb+13%2C+1987&author=&pub=Los+Angeles+Times+(pre-1997+Fulltext)&desc=Sikh+Separatists+Masquerade+as+Police+to+Stage+India's+Biggest+Bank+Robbery&pqatl=google
- http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-3810376.html
- Terrorism & It's Effects By Juan Sanchez, various
- Genesis of terrorism By Satyapal Dang
- Fighting for Faith and Nation By Cynthia Keppley Mahmood - Page 155
- The Tribune, Chandigarh, India - Main News
- The Times of India, Aug 27, 2004
- Wilmington Morning Star, Apr 6, 1986
- Chicago Tribune, May 13, 1984
- Wilmington Morning Star, May 13, 1984
- Fighting for faith and nation By Cynthia Keppley Mahmood
- New Straits Times Malaysia, Jul 13, 1988
- http://books.google.com/books?id=8QufTc6fAocC&pg=PA168&dq=general+labh+singh+fighting+for+faith+and+nation&lr=&num=100&ei=upDaSOfhJKDitQPG2-XeDg&sig=ACfU3U2YnlXSW49kQTTEBo8RDhPhpDFIfQ
- Wilmington Morning Star, Apr 6, 1986 Sikhs kill 6 on courthouse steps
- The Courier - Apr 6, 1986
- Los Angeles Times - Apr 6, 1986
- Chicago Tribune, Apr 5, 1986
- The Free-Lance Star - Apr 5, 1986
- Ludington Daily News - Apr 4, 1986
- Fighting for Faith and Nation by By Cynthia Keppley Mahmood - Page 155
- 'Encyclopedia of modern worldwide extremists and extremist groups' by Stephen E. Atkins
- http://books.google.com/books?id=AK6QA_WotRYC&pg=PT161&dq=general+labh+singh&ei=Rj83Sq-cM5DOlQSi97GnAQ
- http://www.tribuneindia.com/2002/20020125/punjab1.htm
- http://www.canada.com/windsorstar/news/story.html?id=4e9019ee-c9cd-4459-8a1f-e4f08238125e
- http://www.sikhtimes.com/sikhism_timeline.html
- http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-3810376.html
- http://www.satp.org/satporgtp/countries/india/states/punjab/backgrounder/index.html
- http://books.google.com/books?id=z9GG4__JJNwC&pg=PA399&dq=general+labh+singh&ei=NUs3StXSGYSukASb1pCoAQ
- New Straits Times Malaysia, Jul 13, 1988
- New Straits Times Malaysia, Jul 13, 1988
- The Tribune, Chandigarh, India - Main News
- The Tribune, Chandigarh, India - Main News
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|| LIVING = | MISSING = | UNKNOWN = | #default =
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