Friday, October 19, 2007

Review of 200,000 audio tapes revealed no evidence

A key witness the RCMP wanted to testify in the Air India bombing case never told police about any specific threats or concerns she had over her safety, the Ottawa inquiry into the terrorist plot heard Wednesday.
Still, the RCMP visited the woman, dubbed Ms. E, after newspaper publisher Tara Singh Hayer, was gunned down in November 1998, to see if she wanted extra security, RCMP Insp. Doug Best told Commissioner John Major.
Best, who was screened by a white curtain, said he made frequent approaches to Ms. E between 1996 and 2004 to see if he could allay her security concerns about testifying against Ajaib Singh Bagri at the terrorism trial.
Hayer had agreed to be a witness against Bagri when he was gunned down in the garage of his Surrey home.
Best said the RCMP later conducted extra patrols around the woman's house, but that she did not take police up on an offer for additional security.
At one point during a December 1996 interview with the woman, Best told her that Bagri's group, the Babbar Khalsa, was no longer a powerful force.
"In all sincerity, we feel the threat from them, as a group, is minimal, minimal, minimal, because they do not have the infrastructure in place that they once had. Their day has come and their day has gone from a political perspective," Best told Ms. E.
Years earlier, when Ms. E first disclosed to the Canadian Security Intelligence Service that she had incriminating evidence against Bagri, she told CSIS agent Willy Laurie that Bagri would kill her and her children if she went to court.
18/10/07 Kim Bolan/Vancouver Sun/Vancouver Sun, Canada
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