Dear Friends:


>From the Times of India (Apil 13, 2012)

NEW YORK: A US court is set to hear arguments in the 1984 anti-Sikh riots case 
on May 1 even as Congress party opposed the entry of a default judgment against 
it for its alleged role in the riots.
Filing the Congress plea before Judge Robert W Sweet of the US federal court, 
lawyers from "Jones Day" law firm said the case "involves significant issues of 
public international law that should not be decided by a default judgment."
Since all events relating to November 1984 riots took place in India, all the 
individuals and property purportedly harmed by the Congress was located in 
India, said the plea filed in response to a petition filed by Sikhs for Justice 
(SFJ), a New York based community organisation.
Any witnesses or documents that the Congress may have relating to the alleged 
events too are located in India, it said.
Suggesting that local interest in the case was nil, the Congress opposition 
papers said "imposing jury duty on American citizens to hear this 
entirely-Indian dispute would be inappropriate."
Contending that US Court lacks jurisdiction to hear the case, the Congress 
party lawyer Thomas E. Lynch stated that the class action filed by SFJ and 
others is "against a foreign political party for alleged acts occurring 
entirely abroad more than twenty seven years ago."
The Congress opposition was filed in response to the SFJ's motion for entry of 
default judgment against Congress for its alleged failure to defend the charges 
of conspiring, aiding, abetting, organizing and carrying out attacks on Sikh 
population of India in November 1984.







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