Alleged Indian government involvement in plots to assassinate Sikh separatists living in the West

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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is accusing the government of India of being behind a fatal shooting on Canadian soil.

Canadian citizen Hardeep Singh Nijjar was brazenly shot dead outside a Sikh temple in Surrey, B.C. on June 18.

Nijjar, a supporter of a Sikh homeland in the form of an independent Khalistani state, had been branded by the Indian government as a "terrorist" and accused of leading a militant separatist group — something his supporters have denied.

Now, Trudeau said, Canada's national security apparatus has reason to believe that "agents of the Indian government" carried out the killing of this Canadian citizen, who also served as the president of Surrey's Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara.

"Canadian security agencies have been actively pursuing credible allegations of a potential link between agents of the Government of India and the killing of a Canadian citizen, Hardeep Singh Nijjar," Trudeau said Monday.

"Any involvement of a foreign government in the killing of a Canadian citizen on Canadian soil is an unacceptable violation of our sovereignty. It is contrary to the fundamental rules by which free, open, and democratic societies conduct themselves," Trudeau said.

"As you would expect, we have been working closely and coordinating with our allies on this very serious matter."

Trudeau urged the Indian government to participate in the ongoing investigation and "cooperate with Canada to get to the bottom of this matter."

He said some Indo-Canadians are feeling "angry" and "perhaps frightened right now."

"Let us not allow this to change us," he said.



 
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For sure India is going to face significant problems now because the statement made by Trudeau is a substantial matter that will trouble them.
 
For sure India is going to face significant problems now because the statement made by Trudeau is a substantial matter that will trouble them.
It will be brushed under the carpet. Good relations are too important for Canada
 
Well they expelled the Indian diplomat just now
as i told u earlier its not going to be easy running out of this case because when the Prime Minister himself steps forward to make a statement, it indicates that he can feel the intensity of the situation.
 
So a Sikh demanding a homeland is branded a terrorist by the RSS government of India, but RSS killing a Canadian national on foreign soil is what? Yup, international terrorism.

The realities of the Indian government are exposed day by day - which can only be a good thing.
 
Grab my popcorn because it’ll be entertaining to see how Indians will lose their “you know what” in an attempt to try to spin this as Trudeu’s, Canadian Sikh fault, and to attempt comparing everything with Pakistan 😂😂😂😂😂.

🍿🍿🍿
 
He took the G20 humiliations to heart. We are gonna let him cry until his government is out of power. If anyone is from Canada here or knows Canadian politics, they would know how much heat Trudeau is getting from Canadian people. They’re fed up with his woke politics.
 
So what Indian Gov complicit in extra judicial killings? Shock/horror.

==

Canada on Monday accused the Indian involvement in the killing of a Khalistani terrorist last June, and expelled New Delhi's intelligence chief in Ottawa in retaliation.

The diplomatic move sent relations between Ottawa and New Delhi, already sour, to a dramatic new low.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told an emergency session of the parliamentary opposition at mid-afternoon that his government had "credible allegations" linking Indian agents to the killing of Khalistani terrorist Hardeep Singh Nijjar, in June in British Columbia.

NDTV
 
So what Indian Gov complicit in extra judicial killings? Shock/horror.

==

Canada on Monday accused the Indian involvement in the killing of a Khalistani terrorist last June, and expelled New Delhi's intelligence chief in Ottawa in retaliation.

The diplomatic move sent relations between Ottawa and New Delhi, already sour, to a dramatic new low.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told an emergency session of the parliamentary opposition at mid-afternoon that his government had "credible allegations" linking Indian agents to the killing of Khalistani terrorist Hardeep Singh Nijjar, in June in British Columbia.

NDTV
Yes same like USA killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan .
 
In all likelihood, a top Canadian diplomat will too have to pack his bag from Delhi anytime
 
India rejects Allegations by Canada

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In all likelihood, a top Canadian diplomat will too have to pack his bag from Delhi anytime

When is the Canadian election. It’s going to be Trudeau packing his bags very soon anyway. We just have to wait till that.
 
Canada would not had mentioned this incident if they were gonna ignore it later. This will greatly effect Canada-India relations. Indian's want to live in Canada much more then the other way around. Canada would be aware of a tat for tat response by India. They won't care.
 
When is the Canadian election. It’s going to be Trudeau packing his bags very soon anyway. We just have to wait till that.
Trudeau did this amidst reports of his lowest approval ratings & he will lose elections in Canada if they were to occur now. Hiding his failure behind a non issue & to cover the cold treatment he got in India in G20 meet with Canadian media too insulting him on various platforms
 
There is no reason why the Canadian high commissioner to India would be upset to leave. He is returning home to his fully developed first world country leaving a dirt poor third world country with millions living on the streets behind.
 
There is no reason why the Canadian high commissioner to India would be upset to leave. He is returning home to his fully developed first world country leaving a dirt poor third world country with millions living on the streets behind.
Yes same Canada was begging from india to help during COVID19

 
There is no reason why the Canadian high commissioner to India would be upset to leave. He is returning home to his fully developed first world country leaving a dirt poor third world country with millions living on the streets behind.

That’s Pakistan maybe and you’re free to call your country all these filthy things.
Don’t abuse our country.
 
If the PM is making the allegation then that’s a significant statement, so he would need to have hard evidence that this was credible.
 
Usual Indian trolls on display. These sanghis have becomes too big for their own shoes
 
Hardeep Nijjar is no Sikh Leader, he is a bloody terrorist. Really happy that forces of Bharat took care of him.
As a Sikh myself, these Khalistani idiots bring a bad name to Sikhi and its principle. But, for me they are not Sikhs or anything.
They are cretens who need to be eliminated.
The biggest terror attack on Canada was done by Khalistani terrorists, where 350 Candians of Bharat Origin died.
Bharat has asked the Canadians to punish them for past 40 years, but no action from Canada and now the low life Trudeau has the gall to talk about human rights.

Bharat will eliminate anyone who dares to harm its citizens. The terrorist may be in Karachi or Vancouver, Lahore or New York, he will eliminated and sent to hell. Canadian Govt. can do whatever. No one in Bharat cares. The Canadian diplomat has been told to pack his bags and eff off in 5 days. See ya never !!
 
So what Indian Gov complicit in extra judicial killings? Shock/horror.

==

Canada on Monday accused the Indian involvement in the killing of a Khalistani terrorist last June, and expelled New Delhi's intelligence chief in Ottawa in retaliation.

The diplomatic move sent relations between Ottawa and New Delhi, already sour, to a dramatic new low.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told an emergency session of the parliamentary opposition at mid-afternoon that his government had "credible allegations" linking Indian agents to the killing of Khalistani terrorist Hardeep Singh Nijjar, in June in British Columbia.

NDTV
Killing a terrorist is justice.
 
A prominent Sikh leader was brazenly murdered this summer outside a temple in British Columbia (BC), Canada. The death has outraged his supporters and intensified global tensions between Sikh separatists and the Indian government.

On a mid-June evening in the busy parking lot of the Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara in the city of Surrey, Hardeep Singh Nijjar was shot dead in his truck by two masked gunmen.

Months later, the unsolved killing continues to reverberate, in Canada and across borders. Hundreds of Sikh separatists took to the streets in Toronto, along with a handful others in cities like London, Melbourne and San Francisco, in early July to protest the Indian government, which they believe is responsible for his death.

Most recently, in September, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau accused India of being behind Mr Nijjar's death, saying that Canadian intelligence had identified "credible allegations" of a link between his death and agents of the Indian state.

The Indian government has denied any hand in the murder.

The outrage following the 45-year-old's killing has brought to light a long-standing issue of some groups demanding a separate homeland for Sikhs, who are a religious minority that make up about 2% of India's population.

The movement was at its peak in the 1980s in the state of Punjab, which witnessed several violent attacks and deaths. It lost steam after armed forces ran special operations against the movement - but supporters in the diaspora community continued their calls for a separate state, which have intensified in recent years.

India has strongly opposed the Khalistan movement. All mainstream political parties, including in Punjab, have denounced violence and separatism.

Mr Nijjar was a prominent Sikh leader in BC and a vocal backer of a separate Khalistani state. Supporters of his have said that he was a target of threats in the past because of his activism.

India said he was a terrorist and led a militant separatist group - accusations his supporters call "unfounded".

At the time of his death, Canadian investigators said they had not yet established a motive for his murder or identify any suspects, but they have categorised the killing as a "targeted incident".

A murder investigation by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police is ongoing.

Canada is home to the largest Sikh diaspora outside the state of Punjab. On 8 July, hundreds protested Mr Nijjar's death in Toronto outside India's High Consulate building. They were met with a smaller counter protest in support of the Indian government.

The two sides shouted at each other through barricades for several hours, and one pro-Khalistan demonstrator was arrested after attempting to breach the fence.

Even before the weekend, concerns had been raised about the protest.

Some posters for the Toronto event featured the words "Kill India" and labelled Indian diplomats in Canada as "killers", leading the outraged Indian government to summon the Canadian envoy.
Balpreet Singh, the spokesperson for the World Sikh Organisation of Canada, said he believes the Khalistan movement has been somewhat dormant and largely peaceful in recent decades, though it has seen a revival, particularly among youth who did not live through the violence of the 1980s.

But even with this revival, there is a sense that people in Punjab have largely "moved on" from the idea of a separate state for Sikhs, said Gurpreet Singh, a BC-based journalist and radio host who has interviewed Mr Nijjar in the past.

"What we are seeing in Canada is a vocal minority of the Sikh community that is supporting Khalistan," he said.

Mr Nijjar is the third prominent Sikh figure to have died unexpectedly in recent months.

In the UK, Avtar Singh Khanda, who was said to be the head of the Khalistan Liberation Force, died in Birmingham in June under what has been described as "mysterious circumstances" that some believe could be related to poisoning.

Paramjit Singh Panjwar, who was designated a terrorist by India, was shot dead in May in Lahore, the capital of Pakistan's Punjab province.

Mr Singh, with the World Sikh Organisation, said Mr Nijjar had been the target of threats, and that he had warned members of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service as early as last summer that there was likely an assassination plot against the Sikh leader.

He said Mr Nijjar had been planning a non-binding referendum scheduled for September in Surrey on the question of an independent Sikh state, part of a global series of votes aimed at measuring consensus on the formation of Khalistan.

A similar referendum had taken place last year the city of Brampton, Ontario last year, which is home to around 160,000 Sikhs.

Results of the vote have not yet been released, but he said the turnout - an estimated 100,000 people - was met with anger from the Indian government.

"This was devastating to the Indian narrative that (Khalistan) is a fringe or extremist movement," he said.

Following the referendum, India's Ministry of External Affairs warned of a "sharp increase in incidents of hate crimes, sectarian violence and anti-India activities in Canada", though it did not reference any specific incidents or make mention of the referendum.

There are differing narratives on the Khalistan movement in India, as well as the deaths of proponents like Mr Nijjar.

Some Indian commentators have pointed to internal rivalries between Sikh organisations in Canada as the reason behind Mr Nijjar's death.

They have also accused Khalistan supporters in Canada of vandalising Hindu temples with "anti-India" graffiti and of attacking the offices of the Indian High Commission in Ottawa during a protest in March.

But Sikhs and some national security experts in Canada have accused the Indian government of spreading misinformation through its media to malign the Sikh community and supporters of a separate Khalistani state. India has denied this.

Canada's national security adviser to the prime minister has previously accused India of being one of the top sources of foreign interference in Canada.

India, for its part, has argued that the rise of the Sikh separatist movement in Canada has interfered in India's domestic affairs.

Both countries have long-standing diplomatic and trade ties, though relations in recent months have been tense.

Canada announced it has paused talks on a landmark free-trade agreement with India in September, and at a G20 meeting between the two countries, Prime Minister Narendra Modi accused Canada of not doing enough to quell "anti-India" sentiments on Canadian soil.

Balpreet Singh said he believes Canada needs to take a stronger stance against foreign interference by India, arguing that it has mainly targeted the Sikh community.

But he added that Canada has also provided a place where many Sikhs who are supporters of the Khalistani movement can speak openly, and that the community remains defiant in the face of Mr Nijjar's death.

"There is no one telling us we can't talk about Khalistan here," he said. "If you try to tell us we can't talk about our sovereignty, we will do the very opposite."
 
g
Yep - judge/jury/executioner - is fine in your own country.
great one liner but depth and nuance of national security is missing from your end.

Nijjar has a warrant on his name from Punjab Police since 2010, where he was involved in bombings in Ludhiana.
Indian Government has requested/pleaded for his extradition from Canadian Govt since then and have shared all the credible proofs with them. Canada takes no actions and these terrorists plan Anti-India activity.

So, yeah it is fine in my country to kill such individuals who plan to harm Indian citizens.
 
Could someone be kind enough to explain to me why Trudeau’s Canada said that the death of Karima Baloch in 2020 was “non-criminal” and never made a fuss with Pakistan?

Karima Baloch was was a Baloch human rights activist who campaigned for the independence of Balochistan from Pakistan, and was included in the BBC's list of 100 inspirational and influential women in 2016.

Chris Alexander, the former Canadian Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship, stated in a tweet: “All of us who knew Karima see the circumstances of her death as deeply suspicious. We must leave no stone unturned in uncovering & confronting the reality of what happened to her.”

Despite her family and friends believing she was murdered by Pakistan, Canada brushed it under the rug and forgot all about it.

“She had been receiving threats and the last time we spoke, she told me she had received a message that she would be ‘given a gift’ in December,” said Mahganj, Karima’s sister. “But she promised me she would come back. I waited and waited, but then I received a message that she was missing and then I learned she had died. But I can feel her through this silence – they cannot kill her memories.”

“In Canada, the Pakistanis who are in politics do not want to investigate the case,” she added. “But I believe that the truth will reveal itself and Karima will one day receive justice.”
 
g

great one liner but depth and nuance of national security is missing from your end.

Nijjar has a warrant on his name from Punjab Police since 2010, where he was involved in bombings in Ludhiana.
Indian Government has requested/pleaded for his extradition from Canadian Govt since then and have shared all the credible proofs with them. Canada takes no actions and these terrorists plan Anti-India activity.

So, yeah it is fine in my country to kill such individuals who plan to harm Indian citizens.

You cannot go into another country and do this.

Why is that so difficult to understand

You had Trudeau in your country - this should have been raised and extradition done.

Once again, just because you can do it does not make it right.
 
One should not enter other sovereign territory and carry out assassinations. But if one harbours terrorists and those terrorists are planing to assassinate our country diplomats then cant expect diplomatic talks. Tried expediting this person for last 20 years. We simply cant wait our diplomats to be killed.
 
New Delhi: India today expelled a senior Canadian diplomat in a reciprocal move over Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's charge that it played a role in the June killing of a Khalistani terrorist. The diplomat, who is unnamed, has five days to leave the country.
 
New Delhi: India today expelled a senior Canadian diplomat in a reciprocal move over Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's charge that it played a role in the June killing of a Khalistani terrorist. The diplomat, who is unnamed, has five days to leave the country.

The diplomat is Oliver Sylvester. Head of canadian intelligence in India.
 
You cannot go into another country and do this.

Why is that so difficult to understand

You had Trudeau in your country - this should have been raised and extradition done.

Once again, just because you can do it does not make it right.

But Canada can provide platform and financial aid to Khalistani terrorists who are asking for division of Bharat.

For years GOB used the diplomatic channel so that Trudeau could put a leash on these people. Now the result is there for all to see.

RAW has to protect Bharatiya interests and when need arises it has full authority to put to sleep enemies of Bharat anywhere on the world. This is now an opening warning to all countries harbouring anti Bharat terrorists. You could be next if you do not behave.
 

Indian politician killed in Punjab, Canada-based terrorist who has ties with Khalistan claims responsibility​



Already diplomats are being killed in India due to this terrorist outfit. No mercy for these terrorists.
 
GOB is obviously not going to admit this but we all knew it months in advance and we have been celebrating this. This is new age Bharat who goes into the house of the enemy and takes care of business.

This is now a clear warning to UK, Australia etc to also take GOB’s concerns over Khalistanis seriously else we will have to send RAW agents to handle business.

#TigerZindaHae

 
You cannot go into another country and do this.

Why is that so difficult to understand

You had Trudeau in your country - this should have been raised and extradition done.

Once again, just because you can do it does not make it right.

But Canada can allow its territory to be used to fund and train violent secessionists in India?
 
But Canada can allow its territory to be used to fund and train violent secessionists in India?

I belong to Punjab and I know the damages these elements have done to my state. We are screed until another decade because of this whole mess created by Canada funded extremism in Bharatiya Punjab.
 
He is a terrorist, not a leader. He has killed many innocent people.
Sikhs are patriotic people, and they don't care about these jokers.
These so-called foreign radicals should come to India and start a campaign and see what will happen :ROFLMAO:
 
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The US statement on the India-Canada spat “We are deeply concerned about the allegations referenced by Prime Minister Trudeau, It is critical that Canada’s investigation proceed and the perpetrators be brought to justice," White House National Security Council spokesperson Adrienne Watson.

NO MENTION OF INDIA - JUST POINTING OUT THE CANADIAN INVESTIGATION SHOULD PROCEED.
 
Thank you, Akshay Kumar.

Akshay took Canadian citizenship and worked as an undercover agent in Canada for an extended period.

He successfully eliminated all Khalistan terrorists and officially renounced his Canadian citizenship last month.
 
Does that mean Indians who aren’t Sikh, Muslim, Christian will be leaving Canada or will they continue to migrate leaving a 3rd world country to Canada for studies and better future?
 
But Canada can allow its territory to be used to fund and train violent secessionists in India?

So are you saying Bharat has the right to carry out assassinations in foreign countries if they feel their interests aren't being served well enough? Is that what has happened here?
 
More than 60% people's from Canada are criticized the policies of PM Trudeau.He Has fear of losing the election so doing vote bank politics
 
So are you saying Bharat has the right to carry out assassinations in foreign countries if they feel their interests aren't being served well enough? Is that what has happened here?
Yes but only for terrorist who are behind killing or doing propaganda against Bharat .
Gone are the days of separatist appeasement. Thank you GOI
 
So this means that the Indian govt are an International terrorism regime. Good from Canada for calling a spade a spade. Love this country.
 
Does that mean Indians who aren’t Sikh, Muslim, Christian will be leaving Canada or will they continue to migrate leaving a 3rd world country to Canada for studies and better future?
the sikhs and hindus that live in Canada, they prefer to be identified as Canadians and not Indians. Espcially the thrid generation and fourth generation. They even hate visiting back because they accept that the country is a third world filth
 
So, Trudeau has accepted that he failed to protect his own citizens... LMAO! What a joker.
by that logic, when Mumbai attacks took place, India govt by blaming Pakistan also accepted that they failed to protect their borders and country for 1 week
 
So this means that the Indian govt are an International terrorism regime. Good from Canada for calling a spade a spade. Love this country.
So for you Pakistan security force doing operation against TTP In afganistan also international terrorism?? Isn't it??
Or American were killed Osama also State terrorism??
 
So for you Pakistan security force doing operation against TTP In afganistan also international terrorism?? Isn't it??
Just because you are hurt about Canadian Govt calling you out doesnt mean you drag Pakistan here...
 
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If we were to go by Hindutva/RSS narrative, which is Canada has now officially become harboring separatist and terrorist as declared only by Hindutva/RRS then does that mean India were to cut all ties with Canada? Or Canada still a too Caucasian of a country ?
 
B.C. Sikhs ask for protection after Trudeau links Nijjar killing to India

SURREY

SURREY - Harkirat Kaur said she had a relationship with Sikh community leader Hardeep Singh Nijjar that was like “father and daughter” before his killing in Surrey, B.C., in June.

The 19-year-old Sikh activist said she was initially relieved to hear Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tell Parliament on Monday that "credible" intelligence linked India's government to the shooting death of Nijjar, who supported an independent Sikh homeland in India's Punjab province.

But that soon turned to “resentment” about why it took months to acknowledge what the community had been saying since Nijjar was shot dead in the parking lot of the Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara where he was president.

“Why did it take so long? Why did it take someone to be killed for us to have a little bit of acknowledgment of what is happening?” Kaur said outside the gurdwara.

Trudeau's announcement is spurring calls from B.C.'s Sikh community to better protect its members.

British Columbia Premier David Eby is also among those expressing concern. He said Monday he had received a briefing from Canada's spy agency about the "assassination" of Nijjar and was "deeply disturbed" by what he was told.

He called on the federal government to share all information related to ongoing foreign interference and "transnational organized crime threats."

"Canadians across the country must be safe from the interference of foreign governments, including being targeted for threats or physical harm, including murder," he said.

THESTAR​
 
the sikhs and hindus that live in Canada, they prefer to be identified as Canadians and not Indians. Espcially the thrid generation and fourth generation. They even hate visiting back because they accept that the country is a third world filth
Even the newly arriving Indians, they would rather wait hours outside of Indian grocery store trying for job interviews, share a room with 10 other Indians than go back to India to study at prestigious Indian universities.
 
they also killed moosewala, and blamed it on some fictional guy called bishnoi
 
they also killed moosewala, and blamed it on some fictional guy called bishnoi

Moosewala was killed by gangster Goldy Brar as a revenge for the death of Midhu Khera. It has absolutely nothing to do with Khalistani movement. Infact, Treadeu should handover Brar and extradite him to India to face justice.
 
Yes but only for terrorist who are behind killing or doing propaganda against Bharat .
Gone are the days of separatist appeasement. Thank you GOI

Feel free to kill Sikhs in your own country, but sending hit squads abroad to carry out assassinations on foreign ground is not sanctioned by international law. This sort of third world nincompoopery will have annoyed world leaders, I would imagine Bharat will be getting their hands slapped behind closed doors.
 

Did Trudeau think that countries like UK, USA and Australia, will jeopardize their strategic, commercial and diplomatic relationship with India, only because a lowlife Khalistani terrorist was knocked-off?

All that shows is that genuine first world countries put wealth and resources above the law. This will also have been noted by subjective nations across the world. Very hard to argue a clamp down on terrorism when you are giving the green light when it suits your own purposes.
 
Feel free to kill Sikhs in your own country, but sending hit squads abroad to carry out assassinations on foreign ground is not sanctioned by international law. This sort of third world nincompoopery will have annoyed world leaders, I would imagine Bharat will be getting their hands slapped behind closed doors.
If any country give shelter to terrorist who are responsible for killing of Indian citizens then we have our right to go and killed them anywhere
 
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