Sunday, August 12, 2012
Saturday, August 11, 2012
EXCLUSIVE: Ex-girlfriend of Sikh temple shooter arrested on weapons charge
MILWAUKEE – Misty Cook, the
ex-girlfriend of the man suspected of killing six worshippers at a Sikh
temple before a police officer shot and killed him, was arrested on a
weapons charge, law enforcement officials told FoxNews.com.
The gun was found during a search of the South Milwaukee home where
Cook lives, sources said. The weapon, which law enforcement sources did
not identify, was not involved in Sunday’s attack. A law enforcement
source said Cook has a 2002 felony conviction for eluding police, making
it illegal for her to possess a gun. She was arrested Sunday night on
suspicion of being a felon in possession of a firearm and later
released.
"The longer she stayed here with him, the more quiet and more withdrawn she got. In the end she didn't even make eye contact with me."- David Brown, formewr neighbor
Cook, a 31-year-old nursing student, lived with Page at two separate
apartments in South Milwaukee and Cudahy, Wis., according to neighbors.
She has not been charged in connection with the temple shooting. Sources
said Cook will be arrested and processed by the South Milwaukee Police
Department.
Jenna Benn, the Anti-Defamation League’s assistant regional director
in Chicago told Stars and Stripes that Cook is affiliated with the
white-power group Volksfront and is a supporter of the Hammerskin
Nation, a Dallas-based white supremacy group. She said Page's
ex-girlfriend is a prolific poster on hate forums.
with thanks : FOXNEWS : LINK : for detailed news.
Sikh vigil gathers neighbours of many faiths
HUNTSVILLE, Alabama -- A circle of more than 120 visitors and members of Huntsville Sikh community sat together in prayer Friday evening in a demonstration of unity in the face of the violence of Sunday’s shooting at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin.
“I look out, and I see all religions, all races
here,” said Huntsville police Capt. Tommy Presley Jr. “This is our
America. I know some people don’t see it that way, but this is the real
America.”
The gunman in Sunday’s attack, which killed six people
and wounded four others, including a police officer, was a member of
white supremacist organizations.
Dr. Daniel Crosby, a psychologist
who said he became friends in high school with a teenage member of the
congregation because, as a Mormon and a Sikh, they both faced
misunderstanding of their faiths, also spoke.
There was a
good reason for people in Huntsville to gather, he said, even though
they are more than 600 miles from where the attack happened.
“Violence
against one faith group is violence against the bodies of all faith
groups everywhere,” Crosby said, speaking with a voice strained with
emotion. “Doing harm to any of God’s children is doing harm to all of
God’s children.”
The tragedy that had brought so many visitors to
the temple and prompted many to learn about Sikhs should lead to action,
Crosby said.
“Moments like this vigil are bought at an expensive
price,” Crosby said. “The least we can do is to determine how we will
become part of a brighter tomorrow.”
Rajinder Singh Mehta, one of the congregational leaders, thanked visitors for their support of the Sikh community.
“We
are refusing to accept that human beings are malicious and hateful,”
Mehta said. “We are rejecting the notion that we need to live in fear.”
with thanks : AL : LINK : for detailed news.
Thousands Gather to Mourn Six Dead in Shooting at Temple
OAK CREEK, Wis. — One by one, six coffins were rolled into a high school
gymnasium here Friday and were surrounded by Sikh men and women singing
traditional Punjabi hymns. As they sang, thousands of people from
around the world streamed into the gym to mourn the six worshipers who were shot and killed on Sunday at the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin here.
The deaths have rocked the town and reverberated throughout the global
Sikh community, leading neighbors to skip work and visitors from as far
as India to converge at Oak Creek High School for a group memorial
service and wake.
“These bullets have hit their hearts,” said Rajwant Singh, chairman of
Sikh Council on Religion and Education, who traveled from Washington.
“It has become a big family gathering. It is really a shaking moment
hitting the core of the community.”
During the visitation, families of the victims stood next to the bodies
of their loved ones. Wooden coffins, draped with white cloth, were lined
up under the basketball nets. Behind each coffin was a portrait of the
victim and flowers.
A line of visitors stretched out the door and into the parking lot.
Though the gym was packed, with bleachers overflowing, the room was
completely still as the victims’ names were read over a loudspeaker:
Sita Singh, 41; Ranjit Singh, 49; Prakash Singh, 39; Paramjit Kaur, 41;
Suveg Singh, 84; and the temple’s president, Satwant Singh Kaleka, 65.
People of a range of races and faiths wore colored head scarves out of
respect for the Sikh religion. Some were red-eyed from crying. Others
clutched rosary beads. It was the most recent example of the outpouring
of support from a community that has held vigils, sent comforting
e-mails, and helped raise hundreds of thousands of dollars for the
victims’ families over the past week.
“I don’t see how we can forget this,” said Barbara Henschel, 41, of who
lives in nearby Milwaukee and took time off work to attend the service.
“There’s a lot of healing that will have to begin.”
Representatives of the victims’ families, Sikh religious leaders and
government officials spoke during the memorial service, among them Gov.
Scott Walker of Wisconsin and Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr.
“No matter what country your ancestors came from, no matter where you
worship, no matter what your background, as Americans, we are one,” said
Mr. Walker. “When you attack one of us, you attack all of us.”
Friday, August 10, 2012
Sikh rams car into boards outside U.S. Embassy
The person disclosed that he lost his cool after he read about the
shooting incident in Wisconsin and had gone to the Embassy to register
his protest.
Enraged over the shooting incident at a gurdwara at
Wisconsin in the US in which six members of the Sikh community were
gunned down and dozens injured by a U.S. Army veteran this past Sunday, a
young Sikh allegedly rammed his car into some signboards outside the
U.S. Embassy in the high-security Chanakyapuri area of New Delhi on
Wednesday. He was let off after he tendered a written apology for his
conduct.
An alert was sounded at the U.S. Embassy
around 8 p.m. and the Delhi Police immediately summoned after security
guards deployed near the rear portion of the Embassy premises on Nyay
Marg noticed a man in a Wagon-R car ramming some signage boards put up
outside the visa section. The man also allegedly entered into an
altercation with a security guard.
The suspect was
overpowered and handed over to the police. A senior security officer at
the Embassy said the person had created a ruckus earlier too as he had
been denied visa on two-three occasions. However, according to a police
source, the person disclosed that he lost his cool after he read about
the shooting incident in Wisconsin and had gone to the Embassy to
register his protest.
“He was identified as a
resident of Tilak Nagar, following which we contacted his family. We
counselled him and informed him that the U.S. authorities had expressed
regret over the killings and that the American flag at the Embassy was
also kept at half-mast as a symbol of mourning,” said an officer. Having
verified his antecedents, the police contacted the U.S. Embassy
officials to ascertain if they wanted to pursue the matter. “They sought
a written apology from him,” said the officer, adding that the person
was let off after he apologised in writing.
with thanks : The Hindu : LINK : for detailed news.
Thursday, August 9, 2012
Lawsuit filed in US against Punjab CM Badal
On a visit here to commiserate with the Sikhs after the Gurdwara shooting, Punjab Chief Minister Prakash Singh Badal has been hit with a federal lawsuit by a US-based human rights group alleging the 'torture' of Sikhs in the state.
The lawsuit contends that Badal had command and control of law
enforcement officials, who "inflicted cruel and inhumane treatment and
extrajudicial death" on three named plaintiffs and thousands of other
unnamed members of a requested class of plaintiffs, the Journal Sentinel newspaper here said.
Badal is visiting Milwaukee for a wedding and to attend the funerals
of victims in Sunday's Gurdwara shooting in which six Sikhs were killed.
The 30-page complaint was filed in US District Court in Milwaukee by
Avtar Singh of New York, who lists himself as coordinator of 'Sikhs for
Justice.' The daily said Badal declined to comment about the suit,
saying he hadn't seen it.
with thanks : Deccan Chronical : LINK : for detailed news.
'Why are these s****** in India burning the US flag?'
Aziz Haniffa in Washington, DC
Dr Rajwant
Singh, a high-profile Sikh American community leader, has blasted
protestors in New Delhi who have taken to burning the American flag and
shouting anti-US slogans outside the US embassy, calling it totally
counterproductive to the perception of Sikh Americans.
Singh has been appearing all over CNN
and other media outlets explaining what Sikhism is all about following
the horrific massacre of Sikhs at the Oak Creek, Wisconsin gurdwara
Singh, chairman of the Sikh Council on Religion and Education and the long-time executive director of the Guru Gobind Singh Foundation gurdwara in Maryland, told rediff.com that the actions of these protestors was "just outrageous," particularly at a time when 'the Sikh community has received a significant outpouring of support from all levels of government, the mainstream media, and the broader American public.'
Singh, chairman of the Sikh Council on Religion and Education and the long-time executive director of the Guru Gobind Singh Foundation gurdwara in Maryland, told rediff.com that the actions of these protestors was "just outrageous," particularly at a time when 'the Sikh community has received a significant outpouring of support from all levels of government, the mainstream media, and the broader American public.'
with thanks : REDIFF NEWS : LINK : for detailed news.
Sikh rights body strongly condemn flag burners in New Delhi
New York (August 8, 2012): Sikhs For
Justice (SFJ), a human rights advocacy group which is spearheading a US
wide campaign against religious intolerance that resulted in the killing
of six Sikhs during a shootout at Wisconsin Sikh temple took a strong
exception to the burning of American flag by members of National Akali
Dal in New Delhi.
SFJ legal advisor Gurpatwant Singh
Pannun stated that it is unfortunate that members of National Akali Dal
have burnt the American flag in Delhi as this sends a wrong signal to
the US government which is taking every measure to safeguard the
interests of the Sikh community after the Sikh massacre. As the attack
on Wisconsin Sikh temple suggests, “there are already Anti-Sikh
sentiments budding in some quarters of American Society and the action
of burning American flag by National Akali Dal will only fuel such more
sentiments against the Sikhs, a religious minority” added attorney
Pannun.
In an organized move to raise religious
awareness amongst the American community, Sikh Rights Group, SFJ has
been joined by American Gurudwara Prabhandhik Committee (AGPC), Sikh
Youth of America (SYA) and Shiromani Akali Dal (Amritsar) along with
management committees of various Sikh temples across North America.
While praising President Obama for
ordering the US flags to be flown at half mast until August 10 to honor
the victims of the Wisconsin Sikh temple massacre, attorney Pannun
stated that “US administration should take concrete measures for the
safety of the religious minorities in the States”. A US Government
backed educational TV program should continuously make American
community aware of the different religious minorities that have become
integral part of the society and should also state the consequences of
hate crimes so that it deters future such horrific attacks against
religious minorities. SFJ has already announced a $10,000/- gallantry
award for the officer Brain Murphy who risked his life to defend Sikhs
in a shoot out at Wisconsin Sikh Gurudwara.
with thanks : sikh siyasat: LINK
Wednesday, August 8, 2012
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
Sikh body seeks to reward injured police officer
New Delhi: Moved by the courage of the police officer who took eight bullets trying to rescue one of the victims of the shootout at a gurudwara in Oak Creek, Wisconsin, the Delhi Sikh Gurudwara Management Committee has decided to present him with $5,000.
“There were 300-400 people in the gurudwara when the shooting took place. Had there been any lapses on the part of the police, the loss would have much more. We have decided to give $5000 to the police officer who has been injured. We are trying to get more details about him and whether we are allowed to reward the police officer,” said Harvinder Singh, former president of the Committee.
Singh, who handed over a letter to the US ambassador Nancy Powell on Monday urging the government to curb gun culture, said she assured him that all steps necessary would be taken to ensure that such a incident is not repeated.
Praising the swift response by the police department and the US government, Singh said, “A police officer put his own life in danger and killed the gunman. We are very thankful to the police department. Within two hours, gurudwaras across country were provided with security cover.”
The “identity problems” faced by the Sikh community, which number three million across the United States and Canada combined, was due to a general lack of awareness among the American public about the Sikh community and religion, said Singh.
with thanks : FIRST POST : LINK for detailed news.
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