Kanishka bombing: Canada police identifies 'Mr X'; refuses to disclose his name
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) have refused to disclose the name of "Mr X," after finally identifying the person who helped test a bomb a few weeks before the deadly June 1985 mid-air bombing of the Kanishka, an Air India flight which took off from Canada's Montreal and was bound for Mumbai.
Also Read: Indian-Canadian groups urge Kanishka memorial to honour 1985 Air India bombing victims
"The previously unidentified suspect in the mass murder case recently died without ever facing charges," Vancouver Sun quoted RCMP assistant commissioner David Teboul as saying.
"The name cannot be released due to privacy laws even though the he man is dead," he added.
Teboul made the revelation ahead of the 40th anniversary (June 23) of the bombing by Khalistani terrorists, which killed all 329 (307 passengers and 22 crew members) on board flight AI 182. He was speaking in Ireland, as a member of a Canadian delegation which is in the European country for the anniversary ceremony.
Also Read: How India forced Canada to change its stand on Khalistani terrorists
AI 182 was flying towards London for a stopover in the British capital when the bomb exploded, and the remnants of the aircraft fell into a sea off the coast of Ireland.
How was 'Mr. X' identified?
According to Teboul, despite the acquittals of two key suspects in 2005, investigators continued to work on the case “to tie up some loose ends," and this led them to uncover the identity of Mr X.
On June 4, 1985, the individual had travelled to Duncan, British Columbia, with the plot mastermind Talwinder Singh Parmar. The two then joined up with electrician Inderjit Singh Reyat.
The group then went into the woods and tested the bomb, unaware that they were being followed by agents of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service. The agents heard the explosion but mistook it as a gunshot.
Also Read: Canadian govt had whiff of 1985 Air India bombing plot that killed 329, says report
While Parmar, the Babbar Khalsa International founder, was killed in a police encounter in Punjab in 1992, Reyat pleaded guilty to assisting Mr X and Parmar in developing the Air India bomb. However, he later testified that he didn't know the name of Mr. X.
"The previously unidentified suspect in the mass murder case recently died without ever facing charges," Vancouver Sun quoted RCMP assistant commissioner David Teboul as saying.
"The name cannot be released due to privacy laws even though the he man is dead," he added.
Teboul made the revelation ahead of the 40th anniversary (June 23) of the bombing by Khalistani terrorists, which killed all 329 (307 passengers and 22 crew members) on board flight AI 182. He was speaking in Ireland, as a member of a Canadian delegation which is in the European country for the anniversary ceremony.
Also Read: How India forced Canada to change its stand on Khalistani terrorists
AI 182 was flying towards London for a stopover in the British capital when the bomb exploded, and the remnants of the aircraft fell into a sea off the coast of Ireland.
According to Teboul, despite the acquittals of two key suspects in 2005, investigators continued to work on the case “to tie up some loose ends," and this led them to uncover the identity of Mr X.
On June 4, 1985, the individual had travelled to Duncan, British Columbia, with the plot mastermind Talwinder Singh Parmar. The two then joined up with electrician Inderjit Singh Reyat.
The group then went into the woods and tested the bomb, unaware that they were being followed by agents of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service. The agents heard the explosion but mistook it as a gunshot.
Also Read: Canadian govt had whiff of 1985 Air India bombing plot that killed 329, says report
While Parmar, the Babbar Khalsa International founder, was killed in a police encounter in Punjab in 1992, Reyat pleaded guilty to assisting Mr X and Parmar in developing the Air India bomb. However, he later testified that he didn't know the name of Mr. X.
Top Comment
Gursharan Singh
1 day ago
If Kanishka was act of Khalistanies then, Why Government of Canada deported 4 top Indian diplomats along with all staff of Indian Highcommission. Indian Consulate Surinder Malik, Mr Davinder Ahluwalia VC and Mr Brij Mohan Lal VC on the charges of having hand in Kanishka incident? Why Indian government is silent about the role of these Indians? <br/>Why Air India staff who inspite of warning from scanners were instructed to load unaccompanied baggage were not even interviewed? Why all telephone recordings were erased?<br/>India decries accused in air India bombing (Ripudaman Malik) was not found guilty and thus justice was denied. Yet in 2019 India gave Malik the red carpet treatment when they invited him to India as a chief guest. Why did India not arrest Malik for the India bombing when he was on Indian soil, if they really believed he was guilty of the crime? Because they know he didn’t do it… they also know who really did, because they were responsible!<br/>While the Indian gov was committing Genocide of Sikhs in India in 1984-1995 - agents of the Indian gov were conspiring to defame Canadian SikhsRead allPost comment
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