Team Hollywood News Headline
Top News
Celebrate the 75th Anniversary of the Smoky Mountains National Park
We're Giving Away 75 Prize Packages to 75 Families!
Obama urges Morocco help on Mideast peace
RABAT, Morocco, July 4 (UPI) -- U.S. President Barack Obama has urged Morocco's King Mohammed VI to help brin...
China: At least 13 killed in storms
BEIJING, July 4 (UPI) -- Heavy rainstorms in southern China have killed at least 13 people and displac...
At least seven killed in bus crash
LYUBIMETZ, Bulgaria, July 4 (UPI) -- A collision between two buses Saturday killed at least seven people near Lyub...
McCain: U.S. supports freedom-seekers
WASHINGTON, July 4 (UPI) -- The United States shares the ideals of people around the world who fight for ...
Palin's replacement called conservative
ANCHORAGE, Alaska, July 4 (UPI) -- Sarah Palin's impending replacement as Alaska governor says he's going to con...
Accused serial attacker commits suicide
SAN DIEGO, July 4 (UPI) -- A San Diego man accused of home-invasion robberies and sexual assaults allege...
India's Sikhs outraged by sect leader
NEW DELHI, May 21 (UPI) --
A religious sect leader has been accused of impersonating a revered Sikh guru, setting off deadly riots in India's Punjab state. Last week the sect Dera Sacha Sauda placed a newspaper advertisement that Sikhs the advertisement showed sect leader Baba Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh impersonating Sikhism's 10th and last guru, Guru Gobind Singh. Dera Sacha Sauda, which said it considers all religions are the same, claims it is a non-profit group involved in social work. In the riots that followed in Punjab and neighboring Haryana state, one person died and more than 50 others were injured, reports Britain's The Independent. Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, himself a Sikh, appealed for calm. The government is concerned the issue shouldn't become an excuse to revive the fight for a separate Sikh homeland that had rocked India in the past. "Impersonating a Sikh guru always runs the risk of outraging even the most moderate of Sikhs," an official of the Sikh Federation in Britain told The Independent. Some Sikh leaders and clergy demanded the closure of all campuses of the sect in Punjab. Other media reports said the Sikh leadership rejected regrets expressed by the sect chief over the controversy.
Print article · Return to Website · Email This Article
© UPI, Headline News Powered by Bravenet.com
bravenet.com