Sukhdev Singh Babbar

Jathedar Sukhdev Singh Babbar (ਜਥੇਦਾਰ ਸੁਖਦੇਵ ਸਿੰਘ ਬੱਬਰ; 9 August 1955 − 9 August 1992) was the leader of Babbar Khalsa International (BKI),  active in the 1980s in the Indian state of Punjab that was fighting for an independent state for Sikhs, known as Khalistan. He founded (along with Talwinder Singh Babbar and Amarjit Kaur) and commanded BKI continuously for 14 years until he was killed in 1992.

Early life
Sukhdev Singh Babbar was born on 9 August 1955 to Jind Singh and Harnam Kaur in the village of Dassuwal, Patti, Amritsar, Punjab, India. He could study up to the middle level only. He had three brothers. His elder brother, Mehal Singh "Babbar" is also an active leader of the Babbar Khalsa International. The older brother of all three, Angrej Singh, is blind. His family owned 18 acre of land in the village of Dassuwal. The wives of Sukhdev Singh Babbar and Mehal Singh Babbar are sisters who belonged to the adjoining village of Ghariala

Participation in the Khalistan movement
As per The Tribune, the day of the Nirankari-Sikh clash (April 13, 1978) was also the day when his marriage was fixed. On this day, he took the pledge to take revenge on the Nirankaris. He founded the organization  Babbar Khalsa International along with Talwinder Singh Parmar with the objective to secede from India and form the state of Khalistan for Sikhs. The first Unit of BKI was founded in Canada in 1981. This organization has presence in the United States, Canada, UK, Germany, France, Belgium, Norway, Switzerland and Pakistan. Babbar Khalsa International became a major participant in Khalistan movement under his guidance and participated in hundreds of operations against Indian security forces and remained active in several Indian states.

The New York Times described Sukhdev Singh Babbar as the president of the Babbar Khalsa International, the best armed, most feared and most powerful of dozens of the militant groups in Punjab State that are fighting for an independent state for Sikhs, known as Khalistan. During Khalistan movement, the very name of Sukhdev Singh Babbar, chief of Babbar Khalsa International, would strike terror in the minds of the police

Death
He died on 9 August 1992 when heavily armed policemen stormed a villa in the city of Patiala in early August and captured him. At the time, he was India's most wanted Sikh freedom fighters. As per The New York Times, the circumstances of his death remain disputed. Initially, police said that he was killed in a gun battle outside the city. After that, they said that he was unarmed and that he committed suicide by ingesting a cyanide capsule. A third report said that he was shot by the police after his capture.

Faultlines indicates India used the cat system (Special Forces personnel disguised as militant), to trap Mr. Babbar. He was captured with the help of a former Babbar member turned police-cat, who informed on him in exchange for a reward of INR 1,000,000. This former member helped trap Babbar by arranging a meeting of top Babbar members(freedom fighter), ostensibly to work out future strategy. For helping neutralize the chief of the most powerful group of freedom fighters in the state, the turned member also received a full third of the reward on Singh.

Aftermath
Immediately after his death in 1992, Punjab Police illegally occupied Sukhdev Babbar's house where he had died. An Inspector General ranked officer of Punjab Police occupied Mr. Babbar’s house, in the city of Patiala-(House Number 20, Phase I, Urban Estate, Patiala) and it was not handed over to his family even on the orders of Punjab and Haryana High Court in 1997. Supreme Court of India also rejected the SLP filed against Punjab and Haryana High Court orders in August 1998 but his house was still not handed back to his family. In 1999, a “contempt of court proceedings” case against Government of Punjab and Punjab Police officials was being heard in the court of Justice V.S. Aggarwal, Punjab and Haryana High Court. Finally his family members left their home and hearth for an ‘unknown place’, reportedly in a foreign country, a major portion of the ancestral house of the Babbar Khalsa chief now stands demolished and the remaining dilapidated two-room set is locked.