NEW DELHI, Jan. 23 -- Hours after a Delhi court acquitted former Congress MP Sajjan Kumar in a 1984 anti-Sikh riots case linked to Janakpuri and Vikaspuri, the families of the victims said on Thursday that they would challenge the verdict in the Delhi high court, calling it a grave miscarriage of justice. The case pertained to the November 1, 1984, killing of Sohan Singh and his son-in-law Avtar Singh in Janakpuri, and to a separate FIR relating to Gurcharan Singh, who was allegedly set ablaze by a mob in Vikaspuri on November 2, 1984. Both families lived in the Navada area of west Delhi at the time. Sohan Singh lived with his sons Harvinder and Tejinder and daughters Jaspal and Kamaljeet, while his daughter Harjeet and son-in-law Avtar Singh were visiting the family. The second household belonged to Nath Singh, who lived with his sons Gurcharan, Manjeet, Tejender, Trilochan and Trilochan's wife Manjeet. According to the prosecution, a mob attacked the two families, killing Sohan Singh and Avtar Singh, while seriously injuring Nath Singh's family members, with Gurcharan suffering the most grievous injuries after being thrown into a burning truck. Speaking to HT from a village near Mohali, Gurcharan's brother Manjeet said decades of legal struggle had ended in despair. "All the efforts my bedridden brother made have gone to waste. After the massacre, he remained bedridden all his life and died in 2008. He used to attend court hearings in an ambulance with another brother," he said. Recalling the attack, Manjeet said, "A mob broke the door of our house, entered and assaulted us. They dragged us men out and kept beating us. Then they set our shop, scooter and truck on fire and threw my brother into the burning truck. He was badly burnt." Harvinder Singh, Sohan Singh's son and the prime witness in the case, died in 2021. His son Abhijeet, 29, said he was disappointed with the verdict but declined to comment further....