Was a Khalistani flag hoisted at Red Fort? No, it was a Sikh flag which is found in every gurdwara and people carry it almost invariably during religious processions. In gurdwaras, it is hoisted at a height with a ‘khanda’ (a doubleedged sword). The flag flies at the top of this and is called Nishan Sahib.
The type of flag that was fixed atop the pole in Red Fort is usually carried atop vehicles when people go for religious processions or even for religio-political gatherings, or during any movement.
Nishan Sahib aka the ‘Sikh flag’ is there at every gurdwara of the Sikh Regiment. When the contingents of the regiment move their gurdwara, they also carry the Sikh Flag along the ‘bir’ of Guru Granth Sahib and it is treated with great respect by officers and jawans. Nishan Sahib is found at every gurdwara in any Army cantonment.
Was a Khalistani flag hoisted at Red Fort? No, it was a Sikh flag which is found in every gurdwara and people carry it almost invariably during religious processions. In gurdwaras, it is hoisted at a height with a ‘khanda’ (a doubleedged sword). The flag flies at the top of this and is called Nishan Sahib.
The type of flag that was fixed atop the pole in Red Fort is usually carried atop vehicles when people go for religious processions or even for religio-political gatherings, or during any movement.
Nishan Sahib aka the ‘Sikh flag’ is there at every gurdwara of the Sikh Regiment. When the contingents of the regiment move their gurdwara, they also carry the Sikh Flag along the ‘bir’ of Guru Granth Sahib and it is treated with great respect by officers and jawans. Nishan Sahib is found at every gurdwara in any Army cantonment.
Jind/Kaithal/Karnal: “I have lost my father in farmers agitation and will not sit silent until the black laws are repealed,” said Balraj Singh from Bhana village in Haryana’s Kaithal district, whose father, Ramkumar Singh, died of a cardiac arrest on the Tikri border on December 31.
Balraj was in the cavalcade of 25 tractors which left Bhana for the Tikri border on Saturday, in the memory of two farmers from the village who have died while protesting against the three contentious laws imposed by the Centre last year. Ramniwas Singh, whose brother Baldev Singh died of a cardiac arrest at the Tikri border on Januar 21, also left for the state border on Saturday. “I am ready to give my life to save farmers from these laws,” he said.
Chandigarh: Denmark-based packaging company Hartmann has invested in Punjab by acquiring Mohan Fibres in Mohali, with an initial investment amount of Rs 125 crore.
Hartmann Group’s president of the South America and Asia Ernesto on Thursday met Punjab’s chief secretary Vini Mahajan to share the company’s future investment plans in the state. The firm has plans to explore the market of fruit and vegetable packaging in Punjab.
He also shared with the chief secretary that their company haspurchased the existing plant of Mohan Fibres in Punjab looking at the ecosystem and investment climate in the state. Mahajan assured him full support from the state government and Invest Punjab.