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Mother and uncle sent to India to face conspiracy charges in B.C. woman’s death

Jan 24, 2019 | 1:00 PM

VANCOUVER — The federal government says two British Columbia residents have been extradited to India to face conspiracy  charges after they allegedly hired men to kill a young woman and her new husband in that country nearly 20 years ago.

The Justice Department says Malkit Kaur Sidhu and her brother Surjit Singh Badesha were escorted to India by the RCMP and arrived there early Thursday morning.

It says the pair met with Canadian consular officials in Delhi before being turned over to police in Punjab.

Sidhu and Badesha are accused of conspiracy in the murder of Sidhu’s daughter Jassi Sidhu in June 2000 after she went to India to marry a man they disapproved of.

Sidhu’s husband was severely beaten but survived the attempt on his life.

In a unanimous decision in 2017, the Supreme Court of Canada set aside a B.C. Court of Appeal ruling that stopped extradition proceedings over concerns the mother and uncle would be poorly treated or even tortured in India.

The B.C. Appeal Court halted the extradition last year when the pair’s lawyers filed a last-minute court application, bringing them back to B.C. from Toronto before they were to be escorted to India.

The Canadian Press