Speaking at a panel discussion on 'The legal aftermath of 1984 and the way forward' organised by the Sikh Forum to commemorate the riots, Justice Singh, who had enhanced the compensation to the riot victims during his tenure as a judge in the Delhi High Court in 1996, also termed as "unfortunate" that witnesses of the massacre were not given any protection.
"Government officials who neglect their duties and close their eyes on rioters, should be declared an accessory to riots," he said.
Expressing similar views, senior advocate H S Phoolka, one of the panelists and a crusader of the anti-Sikh riot victims, said, "We will not give up till we bring perpetrators to books and will fight for justice so that no political leader misuses his powers. No one is above the country and its law."
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"Had the perpetrators of the riots been punished instead of victims being compensated, the '84 riot like situation wouldn't have repeated in the the form of 1993 Babri Masjid, 2002 Godhra riots and 2014 Muzaffarnagar violence," Phoolka said, adding, "We will not give up till we bring the criminals to book and will fight for justice so that no politician misuses his powers."
Grover, a human rights lawyer, also called for an
alliance cutting across communities to push the government for an Act that holds public servants accountable for their negligence during such situations.
"The CBI has not done much in the matter. We can ask the government to create a commission for prevention of riots and an independent probe into the anti-Sikh pogroms.
"The '84 riots cases should be tried in special fast-track courts and properties of political leaders involved in the massacre, who think their careers are sealed, should be confiscated," the former judge said.
Phoolka, while elaborating on certain ongoing cases related to '84 riots, pointed out the CBI's lapse in a case against former MP and accused Sajjan Kumar in which a 1992 charge sheet against him for murder never reached the court.
Other panelists included the Sikh Forum Vice President A S Narang, Srinivasan Raghavan, President of Lok Raj Sangathan, Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay, journalist and Uma Chakravarti, Human Rights activist.
Raghavan, who has been organising rallies on November 1 every year for the past decade in memory of riot victims, called for a National Genocide Act to execute the principles of UN Convention on Genocide.