New delhi: A report has been prepared in India on the problem of state violence and impunity, APA reports. The report titled 'Who Are the Guilty?' is an independent fact-finding document jointly prepared in November 1984 by two prominent Indian human rights organizations - the People's Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL) and the People's Union for Democratic Rights (PUDR). According to Azeri-Press News Agency, the document was prepared based on research conducted in the areas where the 1984 massacres took place. The main purpose of the report is to objectively investigate the systematic mass violence committed against the Sikh community in the capital Delhi and surrounding areas on October 31, 1984, and to systematically analyze the causes of these events, the mechanisms of organization, the perpetrators, and the socio-political consequences. The report is based on interviews with survivors who escaped the violence and persecution by the Indian government, witnesses, individuals residing in refugee camps, repre sentatives of the police and administration, as well as political officials. The main conclusion of the report is that they prove that the violence that occurred, contrary to official statements, was planned and organized in advance by government forces. The massacres committed by the Indian government have been described by international human rights organizations as 'organized carnage' at the state level, and the report is considered one of the key documents widely cited in this context. Note that at the end of an international conference held in Baku last month, organized by the Baku Initiative Group, representatives of Sikh communities operating in various countries around the world demanded that the Indian government stop the aforementioned persecutions and recognize the massacres that have been committed.