Why does human rights law fall short in protecting people from human rights abuses made by governments acting in the name of self-sovereignty? In this project, I analyze these questions in the context of human rights abuses, such as extrajudicial killings, false imprisonments, rapes committed by law enforcement officers, and forced disappearances in Panjab, India. To do so, I use official reports from non-governmental organizations, an original interview I conducted with a survivor of Operation Blue Star, which was an attack on one of the holiest shrines for Sikhs, process-tracing, and human rights legal analysis. After developing the political and legal framework, I present my research in the form of three narrative case studies. I argue that the acts orchestrated by the Indian government and the tactics they employed to eradicate Sikhs constitute genocide under human rights law. Nonetheless, Sikhs struggle in gaining recognition due to extreme efforts by the Indian Government to cover-up and malign the names of Sikhs through their own governmental groups, and an international political environment that discourages foreign governments from condemning Indian government actions. With the research conducted in this project, links between other human rights violation in India can be found. The lack of accountability of the Indian government in multiple cases can be uncovered, which will prove how even with the existence of human rights law, governments have the most power.