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THE INDIAN ARMY HAS DENIED REPORTS CLAIMING THAT AIR DEFENCE GUNS OR ANY MILITARY EQUIPMENT WERE DEPLOYED WITHIN THE GOLDEN TEMPLE PREMISES DURING OPERATION SINDOOR. THE CLARIFICATION COMES
AFTER SOME MEDIA REPORTS ALLEGED THE ARMY WAS ALLOWED TO STATION DEFENCE RESOURCES INSIDE THE SHRINE. Amritsar: The Indian Army on Tuesday denied reports claiming that air defence (AD) guns
or any other defence equipment were deployed within the premises of Sri Harmandar Sahib (Golden Temple) during Operation Sindoor, which was launched amid heightened tensions with Pakistan.
In a statement, the Army clarified, “Some media reports are circulating with respect to deployment of AD guns in the Golden Temple. It is clarified that NO AD guns or any other AD resource
was deployed within the premises of Sri Darbar Sahib Amritsar (Golden Temple).” The clarification comes after reports suggested that the Golden Temple management had allowed the Army to
deploy air defence resources within the shrine to counter potential drone or missile threats. The claim has also been categorically denied by religious authorities and the Shiromani Gurdwara
Parbandhak Committee (SGPC), the apex Sikh religious body. SGPC, TEMPLE PRIESTS REJECT DEPLOYMENT CLAIMS SGPC president Harjinder Singh Dhami said the administration had contacted the
shrine only to request switching off lights during a city-wide blackout following the escalation of cross-border tensions. "We cooperated in the interest of public safety, but no
permission was given for installing defence equipment," he said. Dhami emphasised that there was no communication from Army officials regarding any deployment inside the shrine complex.
Additional head priest Giani Amarjeet Singh also called the claims "shockingly untrue" and confirmed that no air defence systems were brought into the Golden Temple. Giani Raghbir
Singh, Head Granthi of Sri Harmandar Sahib, who was abroad at the time of Operation Sindoor, also said he was not contacted for any such decision, and there was no such activity at the
shrine. RELIGIOUS CONDUCT MAINTAINED DURING BLACKOUT The temple management confirmed that only the upper and exterior lights were turned off during the blackout, while interior lights
required for maintaining religious 'maryada' (code of conduct) remained on. “The Langar, Akhand Path Sahib recitations, and other daily religious practices continued without
interruption,” Singh said. Dhami added that large numbers of devotees visited the shrine during this time, and any unusual activity such as gun deployment would not have gone unnoticed.
While acknowledging the Army’s role during heightened tensions, he criticised the spread of “falsehoods” and demanded an official clarification from the government. (With PTI inputs)