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Undid revision 209408098 by Mightyunit (talk) - Please read the reference, he is not IHF cheif anymore.
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Gill publishes the Faultlines journal and runs the Institute for Conflict Management, as well as advising governments and institutions on security related issues. He was asked by the government of Sri Lanka last year for similar advice. Mr Gill has also written a book, "The Knights of Falsehood", which explores the abuse of religious institutions by the politics of freedom struggle in Punjab.
Gill publishes the Faultlines journal and runs the Institute for Conflict Management, as well as advising governments and institutions on security related issues. He was asked by the government of Sri Lanka last year for similar advice. Mr Gill has also written a book, "The Knights of Falsehood", which explores the abuse of religious institutions by the politics of freedom struggle in Punjab.


He got involved in sports administration after retirement and was the IHF ( Indian Hockey Federation) president for 15 years till he was unceremoniously sacked. [http://www.rediff.com/sports/2008/apr/28ioa.htm]
He got involved in sports administration after retirement and is currently the IHF ( Indian Hockey Federation) president.


He has also been appointed as a consultant by the [[Chattisgarh]] government to help tackle the [[Naxalite]] movement in the state.
He has also been appointed as a consultant by the [[Chattisgarh]] government to help tackle the [[Naxalite]] movement in the state.


==Contribution to Counter-Terrorism==
==Contribution to Counter-Terrorism==
For 10 years, the Punjab countryside was in the grip of terrorists, over 10,000 lives were lost before the Punjab Police led by J.F. Ribeiro and following him K.P.S. Gill put them down with a heavy hand{{Fact|date=January 2008}}. A section of the community hailed [[Bhindranwale]] as a martyr, lent tacit support to the demand for a separate state and condemned Gill as a wanton killer. According to [[Khushwant Singh]] , they were wrong and Gill saved Sikhs and Punjab for India. He came out as a hero for India in [[Khalistan]] episode.
For 10 years, the Punjab countryside was in the grip of terrorists, over 10,000 lives were lost before the Punjab Police led by J.F. Ribeiro and following him K.P.S. Gill put them down with a heavy hand{{Fact|date=January 2008}}. A section of the community hailed [[Bhindranwale]] as a martyr, lent tacit support to the demand for a separate state and condemned Gill as a wanton killer. According to Khushwant Singh , they were wrong and Gill saved Sikhs and Punjab for India. He came out as a hero for India in Khalistan episode.


==KPS Gill's Counter-Terrorism Techniques in Punjab==
==KPS Gill's Counter-Terrorism Techniques in Punjab==
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==Criticism==
==Criticism==
For some critics his success is a part of the story started by predecessor [[Julio Francis Ribeiro]] who started the "Bullet for Bullet" campaign of hitting back at militants and the strong hand in dealing with militancy adopted by Chief minister [[Beant Singh (chief minister)| Beant Singh]].
For some critics his success is a part of the story started by predecessor [[Julio Francis Ribeiro]] who started the "Bullet for Bullet" campaign of hitting back at militants and the strong hand in dealing with militancy adopted by Chief minister [[Beant Singh (chief minister)| Beant Singh]].

===Sexual Crime===


In August 1996 Gill was convicted of sexually harassing a senior Punjabi female civil servant, Rupan Deol Bajaj, for pinching/ slapping her bottom while inebriated at a party <ref>http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/msid-1183776,prtpage-1.cms </ref><ref>[http://www.india-seminar.com/2001/505/505%20pratiksha%20baxi.htm 505 Pratiksha Baxi, Sexual harassment<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref><ref>http://www.tribuneindia.com/2005/20050728/main5.htm</ref>. Mr Gill had to pay a hefty fine and was sentenced to three years in prison which was later reduced to probation.
In August 1996 Gill was convicted of sexually harassing a senior Punjabi female civil servant, Rupan Deol Bajaj, for pinching/ slapping her bottom while inebriated at a party <ref>http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/msid-1183776,prtpage-1.cms </ref><ref>[http://www.india-seminar.com/2001/505/505%20pratiksha%20baxi.htm 505 Pratiksha Baxi, Sexual harassment<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref><ref>http://www.tribuneindia.com/2005/20050728/main5.htm</ref>. Mr Gill had to pay a hefty fine and was sentenced to three years in prison which was later reduced to probation.
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====Sacking====
====Sacking====
On 28th April 2008, [[Indian Olympic Association]] sacked KPS Gill, and new team is formed. Due to money scam for selection process, his assistant [[Kandaswamy Jothikumaran]] caught in a sting camera operation by [[Aaj Tak]] Television, which gave money for selecting a player.
On 28th April 2008, Indian Olympic Association sacked KPS Gill, and new team is formed. Due to money scam for selection process, Kandaswamy Jothikumaran his assistant caught in a sting camera operation by Aaj Tak Television, which gave money for selecting a player.


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 23:28, 1 May 2008

Kanwar Pal Singh Gill
File:KPS GIll.jpg
Born
Occupation(s)President, Indian Hockey Federation

Kanwar Pal Singh Gill, began his career as a police officer in the north-eastern state of Assam, quickly earning a reputation as a tough officer. He became a household name across the country as Punjab police chief in the early 1990s, when he was credited with crushing a separatist revolt and addressing terrorism in the Sikh-majority state, for doing so, he earned the sobriquet of a "supercop".[1]

Gill publishes the Faultlines journal and runs the Institute for Conflict Management, as well as advising governments and institutions on security related issues. He was asked by the government of Sri Lanka last year for similar advice. Mr Gill has also written a book, "The Knights of Falsehood", which explores the abuse of religious institutions by the politics of freedom struggle in Punjab.

He got involved in sports administration after retirement and is currently the IHF ( Indian Hockey Federation) president.

He has also been appointed as a consultant by the Chattisgarh government to help tackle the Naxalite movement in the state.

Contribution to Counter-Terrorism

For 10 years, the Punjab countryside was in the grip of terrorists, over 10,000 lives were lost before the Punjab Police led by J.F. Ribeiro and following him K.P.S. Gill put them down with a heavy hand[citation needed]. A section of the community hailed Bhindranwale as a martyr, lent tacit support to the demand for a separate state and condemned Gill as a wanton killer. According to Khushwant Singh , they were wrong and Gill saved Sikhs and Punjab for India. He came out as a hero for India in Khalistan episode.

KPS Gill's Counter-Terrorism Techniques in Punjab

There were serious charges leveled against him and his police by human rights activists that thousands of suspects were killed in staged shootouts and thousands of bodies were cremated/disposed without proper identification or post-mortem.[2][3] [4] [5]

Several number of Sikh women - teenage girls, young and old women, were reportedly gang-raped and molested by Indian security forces during house to house searches. Looting of the villagers’ property and ransacking of the entire villages also happened during his reign. [6][7]

Human Rights Watchdog has also reported that women (relatives of Terrorists/militants and the ones who were doubted as their harbours) ranged from teenagers to old were usually taken to the police custody where they were beaten, molested and physically harassed by male police officers to demoralize militants. In some cases men and women of same families were stripped naked and made to stand along with each other. Police also raised certain armed gangs to commit attrocities as well as looting of militant sympathizers[8][9]

As per HRW, Indian security forces arbitrarily detained, tortured, executed, and “disappeared” tens of thousands of Sikhs in counterinsurgency operations. In the early 1990s, Director General of Police (DGP) KPS Gill expanded upon a system of rewards and incentives for police to capture and kill militants, leading to an increase in “disappearances” and extrajudicial executions of civilians and militants alike. A recent study conducted by Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) and the Bellevue/NYU Medical Center Program for Survivors of Torture revealed that family members of the “disappeared” were also tortured in over half of the cases they investigated[10].

Quotes

"Democracy and liberalism are not a sufficient defence and this is a fact that the ideologues of ‘freedom’ need, equally, to comprehend. There is a fatal flaw in the liberal mind. Having established, in structure and form [though seldom in substance], a system of governance that corresponds to its conception of democracy, it feels that nothing more needs to be done. The ‘Truths’ of the liberal ideology are, as the American Declaration on the Rights of Man expresses it, ‘Self Evident’. They require no proof, no reiteration, and no defence - certainly no defence by force of arms. Once democracy [or even the ritual of quinquinneal elections] is established, according to liberal mythology, the mystical ‘invisible hand’ keeps everything in place; the ‘superior wisdom of the masses’ ensures order and justice...

This is just so much rubbish. As we should know after living with falsehoods for fifty years now. Truth does not triumph; unless it has champions to propound it, unless it has armies to defend it."

Punjab: The Knights of Falsehood

Criticism

For some critics his success is a part of the story started by predecessor Julio Francis Ribeiro who started the "Bullet for Bullet" campaign of hitting back at militants and the strong hand in dealing with militancy adopted by Chief minister Beant Singh.

In August 1996 Gill was convicted of sexually harassing a senior Punjabi female civil servant, Rupan Deol Bajaj, for pinching/ slapping her bottom while inebriated at a party [11][12][13]. Mr Gill had to pay a hefty fine and was sentenced to three years in prison which was later reduced to probation.

Indian Hockey Federation

KPS Gill was the head of the Indian Hockey Federation untill sacked on April 28th 2008. It was under his leadership that India failed to qualify for the Olympic Games for the first time since 1928. In an interview with NDTV, which exposed the shallow and momentary love for Indian hockey in the Indian media, and left the media people fumbling for words, he said that he would not resign because he believed that that was the easy way out.[14] He had been at the top spot since around 15 years.[15][16].

As per Times Now KPS Gill has been sacked from the top position of Indian Hockey Federation (IHF) on April 28th 2008 by the Indian Olympic Association (IOA) and has suspended the IHF for an indefinite period on charges of corruption[17][18][19]

Sacking

On 28th April 2008, Indian Olympic Association sacked KPS Gill, and new team is formed. Due to money scam for selection process, Kandaswamy Jothikumaran his assistant caught in a sting camera operation by Aaj Tak Television, which gave money for selecting a player.

References

  1. ^ "'Supercop' Gill to take on Chhattisgarh Maoists". Chandigarh: The Tribune. April 6, 2006. Retrieved 2008-03-13. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ http://news.sbs.com.au/dateline/india__who_killed_the_sikhs_130052
  3. ^ http://www.hinduonnet.com/2005/09/09/stories/2005090903181100.htm
  4. ^ http://www.indiatogether.org/2003/jun/hrt-missing.htm
  5. ^ http://www.amnestyusa.org/document.php?lang=e&id=F072BE8A8A0506C08025690000692C86
  6. ^ https://www.ihro.in/?q=node/124
  7. ^ http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/ASA20/002/2003/en/uvSEW2lMY-gJ
  8. ^ https://www.ihro.in/?q=node/46
  9. ^ https://www.ihro.in/?q=node/90
  10. ^ http://hrw.org/reports/2007/india1007/3.htm#_ftn1
  11. ^ http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/msid-1183776,prtpage-1.cms
  12. ^ 505 Pratiksha Baxi, Sexual harassment
  13. ^ http://www.tribuneindia.com/2005/20050728/main5.htm
  14. ^ NDTV.com
  15. ^ The buck stops at Gill
  16. ^ Hockey in shame, up to its Gill
  17. ^ http://www.timesnow.tv/Newsdtls.aspx?NewsID=7753
  18. ^ http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/000200804281964.htm
  19. ^ http://www.hindustantimes.com/storypage/storypage.aspx?id=90876764-7915-4961-a538-14a4fc12135f&&Headline=KPS+Gill+sacked+as+Indian+hockey+chief