
An indication exterior the Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara temple is seen after the killing on its grounds in June 2023 of Sikh chief Hardeep Singh Nijjar, in Surrey, British Columbia, Canada September 18, 2023. REUTERS/Chris Helgren
Ottawa, Canada — Canada on Monday accused India’s authorities of involvement within the killing of a Canadian Sikh chief close to Vancouver final June, and expelled New Delhi’s intelligence chief in Ottawa in retaliation.
The diplomatic transfer despatched relations between Ottawa and New Delhi, already bitter, to a dramatic new low.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau instructed an emergency session of the parliamentary opposition at mid-afternoon that his authorities had “credible allegations” linking Indian brokers to the slaying of an exiled Sikh chief, Hardeep Singh Nijjar, in June in British Columbia.
“The involvement of any international authorities within the homicide of a Canadian citizen on Canadian soil is an unacceptable violation of our sovereignty,” Trudeau mentioned.
He known as “within the strongest doable phrases” on the Indian authorities to cooperate in clearing up the matter.
Overseas Minister Melanie Jolie mentioned the Trudeau authorities had taken fast motion.
“At this time now we have expelled a senior Indian diplomat from Canada,” she mentioned, with out naming the official.
Jolie mentioned the expelled Indian is the top of the Analysis and Evaluation Wing (RAW), India’s international intelligence company, in Canada.
Nijjar, whom India had declared a wished terrorist, was gunned down on June 18 in Surrey, a suburb of Vancouver that’s residence to a significant Sikh group. Canada has the most important inhabitants of Sikhs exterior of Punjab, India.
Nijjar advocated for the creation of an unbiased Sikh state to be carved out of components of northern India and maybe a part of Pakistan. India accused Nijjar of finishing up terrorist assaults in India, a cost he denied.
Tensions between India and Canada have been simmering over the unsolved slaying, and Indian unhappiness over how Ottawa has dealt with right-wing Sikh separatists.
New Delhi accuses Ottawa of turning a blind eye to the actions of Sikh nationalists who search a separate Sikh homeland in northern India.
A former adviser to Trudeau, Jocelyn Coulon, asserted that Canada’s accusation would have “the impact of a bomb all over the world.”
India will be a part of “the group of countries that assassinate political opponents” overseas, a lot as Saudi Arabia orchestrated the homicide of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in Turkey in 2018, mentioned Coulon, who’s now an unbiased researcher.
New Delhi didn’t instantly reply to Canada’s prices.
Tensions between the 2 nations flared additional earlier this month throughout the G20 summit in New Delhi, which Trudeau attended.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed “sturdy issues about persevering with anti-India actions of extremist components in Canada” throughout a gathering with Trudeau, in response to an Indian authorities assertion.
India has typically complained about actions of the Sikh diaspora overseas, notably in Canada, which New Delhi believes may revive a Sikh separatist motion.
The Indian state of Punjab, which is 58 % Sikh and 39 % Hindu, was rocked by a violent separatist motion within the Nineteen Eighties and early Nineteen Nineties, wherein 1000’s died.
Canada additionally lately suspended negotiations for a free commerce settlement with India.
Trudeau later instructed media that Canada would all the time defend “freedom of expression, freedom of conscience and freedom of peaceable protest” whereas performing in opposition to hatred.
RELATED STORIES
Modi scolds Trudeau over Sikh protests in Canada in opposition to India
India summons Canada Excessive Commissioner, involved over Sikh protesters
Learn Subsequent
Subscribe to INQUIRER PLUS to get entry to The Philippine Day by day Inquirer & different 70+ titles, share as much as 5 devices, hearken to the information, obtain as early as 4am & share articles on social media. Name 896 6000.
For suggestions, complaints, or inquiries, contact us.