[India] - Killings continents apart in linked to Kanishka case

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
CHANDIGARH: A series of mysterious killings of Sikh immigrants 25 years ago started with two Sikhs, prominent in their communities, who were
killed in the 1990s - one in England's Southall and the other in Canada's British Columbia.There was a gap of three years between the
killings of Tarsem Purewal and Tara Singh Hayer, editors of England-based 'Des Pardes' and Canada-based 'Indo-Canadian Times', respectively,
but both the cases had stark similarities
Both were editors and owned popular Punjabi newspapers, and they had a Kanishka bombing connection too.Hayer was a key witness in the trial
of Air India flight 182, or Kanishka, bombing, which resulted in the death of all 329 abroad
Purewal's name, as per reports, found mention in the probe of the case
Both were shot dead while coming back from their offices
At the time of their killings, both were in their early sixties
Most importantly, killers in both the cases remained unidentified
Hayer survived the first attempt on his life in 1988
Purewal was killed on January 24, 1995
Hayer, at the time, had allegedly written some articles for 'Indo-Canadian Times', wherein he named some top Babbar Khalsa leaders as
conspirators behind the bombing
Days later, he was attacked in his office and was left paralysed.In October 1995, Hayer agreed to become prosecution witness in the Kanishka
bombing case
Three years later, when the trial had not even begun, Hayer was killed on November 18, 1998
In 2006, the Canadian government announced a public inquiry into the case.Apart from professional friendship and bonhomie, what tied Hayer
and Purewal to each other and to the Kanishka case is Hayer's submission to the Canadian authorities, wherein he referred to Purewal.As per
Hayer's claim, during his England visit in 1985, he had overheard a discussion about the bombing between Purewal and an individual
In 2005, when the trial concluded, the individual named by Hayer was acquitted by the Canadian court
When Hayer submitted this claim in 1995, Purewal was already dead
The claim was never proved in court
Trial in the case began in 2000
By then, Hayer was also dead.