Canadian honour killing suspects extradited to India Published duration 25 January 2019

image copyright justiceforjassi.com image caption Malkit Kaur Sidhu and Subjit Singh Badesha (right photo) are accused of planning conspiring to kill the couple

Eighteen years after Jaswinder Sidhu was murdered in India, her mother and uncle have been extradited from Canada to stand trial in the country.

Malkit Kaur Sidhu and Surjit Singh Badesha, both of whom are Canadian, were taken into custody on Friday, a day after their arrival, police said.

The two are accused of ordering the killing after Jaswinder married a rickshaw driver in India.

They have denied involvement in her death, which happened in Punjab state.

Ms Sidhu and Mr Badesha were arrested in Canada in 2012 under the Extradition Act following an international investigation by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and Indian authorities.

It is unclear when the trial will begin.

A court in Punjab remanded Ms Sidhu and Mr Badesha to custody on Friday, police told BBC Punjabi's Daljit Ami. Both are elderly and have a number of health conditions.

"They should spend rest of their lives in jail. I don't want them to be sentenced to death," Sukhwinder Mithu Singh, Jaswinder's husband, told BBC Punjabi.

He added that he was grateful to the police for continuing to pursue the case.

Ms Sidhu and Mr Badesha are among 13 people who were charged in India for the killing.

Three of them - the two contract killers who committed the crime and a police officer who connected them to the family - have already been convicted and sentenced to life in prison .

Jaswinder or Jassi , as she was known, lived in Canada's British Columbia and met Mr Singh during one of her visits to India. They married secretly in 1999 after which she returned to Canada.

She came to India in 2000 to reunite with her husband, allegedly fleeing months of abuse and harassment at the hands of her family who had found out about her marriage.

But on 8 June 2000, the couple were ambushed by a group of attackers while riding on a scooter.

Singh was badly beaten while the body of Jaswinder, her throat cut, was found in a ditch the next day.

image copyright Sukhcharan Preet image caption Mr Singh was badly beaten in the attack

Officer Swaran Khanna, who investigated the case, told BBC Punjabi that the key evidence was an affidavit filed by Jaswinder in which she said that her family was capable of killing her and her husband.

He said they also obtained details about phone calls between family members and the hired killers, which amounted to 300 pages.

In 2014, a British Columbia Supreme Court judge ordered the extradition of Ms Sidhu and Mr Badesha. They were almost sent to Delhi in 2017 but a court blocked the order over concerns that they could be subjected to violence, torture or neglect in the Indian prison system.