Lobbyist
for Sikhs seen as misleading lawmakers
By:
Michael S. Gerber
Dr.Gurmit
Singh Aulakh, who lobbies Capitol Hill on behalf of the
Sikhs in India, has upset a number of House foreign policy
aides who say he has tricked them into signing letters in
support of his cause.
But
Aulakh president for 15 years of the Council of Khalistan,
the self-described Sikh government in exile, brushes aside
the complaints and says, “congressmen are responsible for
their own signatures.”
Courtney
Anderson, senior legislative assistant for Rep.John Shimkus
(R-III), claims that Aulakh mislead her office by implying
to a junior staffer that Shimkus had agreed to sign a letter
to President Bush calling for the release of political
prisoners in India.
Anderson
says Aulakh had already printed Shimkus’ name on the
letter, leading the junior staffers to assume that the
office had agreed to sign it.
Aulakh
vehemently denies that he mislead anyone, and calls the
accusations against him” ridiculous.” He blames the
complaints against him on the Indian Embassy and its
lobbyists. Who he says pressure members not to sign his
letters.
“They
are doing their jobs and we are doing ours,” he said,
adding that without the resources of a nation like India, he
is forced to use alternative methods of lobbying.
But
one side with ties to the 131-member congressional India
Caucus said Aulakh has been getting away with tricking
staffers into signing letters for several years.
“He’s
sort of grandfatherly,” the aide said.” He says in a
soft voice, ‘I’ m here for the congressman’s signature
on this letter.;
“When
we called up later, about a quarter of [foreign policy
aides] genuinely did not have the foggiest clue they signed
it,” the aide said, referring to one of Aulakh’s
previous letters. “[But ] they’re reluctant [ to have
the signatures removed ] because they don’t want to be
seen as flip-flopping.”
Anderson
said she became aware of the letter only after a colleague
from another office asked why shimkus had signed it.
Anderson usually sees any letter related to foreign policy
that comes through the office.
“[The
staffer ] comes by with a letter with my boss’s name on
it,” Anderson said, “ and I’d never seen it before. I
never saw a ‘Dear Colleague’ and no one ever talked to
me about this.”
While
it appears that Aulakh himself printed the letter on a
congressional letterhead, press releases from the Council of
Khalistan list Rep.Dan Buirton (R_ind.) and Rep.Edolphus
Towns (D_N>Y), both long-time supporters of Khalisan, as
“sponsors” of the letter. Burton’s name appears first
on the list of signatures; his office did not return
repeated calls for comment.
Anderson
is not the only aide to complain about Aulakh;s tactics. A
legislative assistant to another Republican House member
says that after he talked to Aulakh and agreed to look over
the letter, the Sikh activist returned to the office and
told the staffer at the desk that the congressman bad
committed to signing.
According
to the aide. Aulakh came back
a third times as well, but the staff had been warned
and asked him to leave.
At
least one other office actually singed the letter and later
claimed to have been tricked, said a former aide to Rep.
KenBentsen (D-Texas). The aide said Aulakh had put
Bentsen’s name on the letter before anyone ever saw it.
“
I’ve been up here five years,” the aide said, “ and
the only time that happens is when a member has [already]
agreed to sign the letter.”
Anderson
complained to Aulakh and was able to get her boss’s
signature taken off the letter. Which was eventually sent to
the president in ‘February with 42 members of Congress
signed on.
“
I think it’s unusual to pull [a name] off a letter.” the
former Bentsen staffer said. But when he called Towns to
have his boss’s name removed, the Towns staffer
“didn’t seem surprised.”
Anderson
believes some of the signatures on the letter sent to the
president may have also been the result of confusion and has
asked the House Administration Committee to get involved.
“The
letter did not go through the usual ‘Dear Colleague;
process, whereby a draft copy of a letter is circulated in
advance. Members agree to sign the letter, and then a copy
is brought to those offices for an authorized signature.”
Shimkus wrote in a March 22 letter to House Administration
Chairman Bob Ney (R-Ohio).
“We
ask that the Committee on House Administration be aware of
this incident and take action to warn members and their
staff to be cautious when a letter is circulated by a
representative of an outside organization and not a
congressional staff member,” the letter to Ney concluded.
Other
House aides who have dealt with Aulakh say that while his
methods are not typical, he has never tried to deceive them.
“My
relationship has been totally fine; he’s been really nice
and informative,” said one House legislative assistant
whose office chose not to sign the letter pertly because of
past links between the Sikh independence movement and
terrorist activity “I understand he actually has a really
good reputation on Capitol Hill.”
Aulakh
has lived in the United States since 1970 and is now an
American citizen. Before becoming president of the council
of Khalistan, he worked at the National Institutes of health
and Harvard University as a virologist. His distinctive
beard and orange turban make him easily recognized on the
Hill.
Although
Anderson said she would not want to meet with Aulakh or sign
another of his letters, no matter how legitimate his cause,
the Sikh activist does not appear concerned that the
accusations against him will hurt his cause.
“Those
[131 members of Congress] in the India caucus don’t sign
it,” Aulakh said. “What difference does one more
make?”
.