In 1996, Siddharth Shankar Ray, who had taken over as governor of Punjab, called me to Raj Bhavan and said he was greatly disturbed by the allegations of extra-judicial killings. He told me, “I want these people (terror suspects) to be prosecuted in court and punished in accordance with the law.” Khalistani militancy was at its height and police were doing away with terror suspects, partly because prosecution was an almost impossible task: in the atmosphere of terror, there were hardly any witnesses willing to depose against terrorists. Victims of terror belonging to the same village as the accused would refuse to identify them in court. Judges, too, lived under constant threat, making it difficult for them to function without fear. It was in this oppressive atmosphere that I was called on to prosecute young men driven by discontent and ideology.