"The commission has defeated the very purpose it was constituted for. It appears to have worked overtime to hide what actually was needed to be revealed", he said in a statement here.
He said its mandate was not to "fix the compensation" for those killed or injured, but to arrive at an "unambiguous conclusion as who was responsible for the sacrilege and who was responsible for the killing of the protestors".
"Not that we had expected much from the commission, but we did not expect the report to be so tame that it will not even touch the basic issues involved", the former Chief Minister said.
Awarding compensation to the victims is an administrative matter which can be handled by the government even without any recommendations, he added.
Amarinder demanded the compensation should be same for those killed and those handicapped for life.
Yesterday, the judicial commission headed by Justice Singh has submitted its report to the state government.
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Amarinder said Punjab was yet to rid itself of the baggage it inherited from the "second partition" in 1966, adding that never in history have people of a state volunteered to reduce their land instead of expanding it.
"And the very Akalis who were responsible for this shameful deed are now brazenly celebrating the occasion. No well meaning Punjabi could feel proud over what happened to Punjab 50 years ago," he charged.
"Recent years have witnessed a serious collapse of the state on all fronts, be it economic, agricultural, industrial or law and order," he said.
Amarinder promised to restore the state to its pristine glory if Congress was voted to power in the 2017 state Assembly elections.
"From being one of India's most prosperous states, Punjab had been reduced to being the backward one," he said.
The Congress leader added that the Akalis seemed hell-bent on destroying the state completely and irrevocably and urged the people of Punjab to rise against their nefarious designs.
