Several people have been injured after Sikh groups
brandishing swords clashed at India's Golden Temple as special prayers were
held to mark the deadly military offensive there in 1984.
Reports said the fight at Sikhism's holiest shrine
was over who would speak first at the ceremony and that a scuffle broke out
over a microphone.
Footage showed men running down temple steps lashing
out with their swords.
Reports said at least three people had been taken to
hospital with injuries.
The Indian government says 400 people and 87
soldiers were killed during the 1984 military raid to flush out Sikh
separatists from the Golden Temple at Amritsar, code named Operation Blue Star.
But Sikh groups say the number of casualties was
much higher and estimate it closer to 1,000.
On Friday, hundreds of Sikhs had gathered at the
shrine to remember those killed in the June 6 raid 30 years ago, but the
ceremony soon erupted into chaos.
hundreds of Sikhs gathered at the shrine to remember
those killed in the 6 June, 1984, raid Reports said the rival groups
fought over who would speak first at the ceremony.
Television footage showed the rival groups, sporting
blue and orange turbans, fighting each other on a staircase and through the
courtyard.
"Today we were supposed to have a solemn
remembrance for the martyrs of 1984, so what has happened is very sad," Prem
Singh Chandumajra, a spokesman for Punjab state's ruling party Shiromani Akali
Dal (SAD), told reporters.
"The temple has once again been dishonored
today."
Mr Chandumajra said the clashes in the holy place
were unacceptable and that the temple management would take action against
those involved.
A senior police official told the BBC the situation
had been brought under control and the city was peaceful.
The 1984 military operation sparked off a chain of
events that led to the assassination of the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi
by her Sikh bodyguards.
That, in turn, led to days of anti-Sikh rioting in
Delhi which left thousands dead - and Sikh groups argue that there has still
been no accountability for either the army assault or the riots.
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