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Despite Trudeau, Canada is India’s Natural Partner

Much of what Prime Minister Trudeau has been doing is indefensible, but it needs never to be forgotten that one Trudeau, even a Prime Minister Trudeau, does not make Canada, writes Prof. Madhav Das Nalapat

Not just Canada’s largest television network, CBC, but several newspapers in that country are dependent on direct and camouflaged government handouts for their existence. The Liberal Party headed by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has been exceptionally generous in the giving of such subsidies, so it comes as no surprise that he has overall got adoring media coverage. Those familiar with his entourage say that a thorough scan of the daily press clippings involving him is an important part of his daily workload. Should there be criticism, the effort by him is not to have a relook at the policies that are being attacked.

Rather, it is to discover ways of either reaching out to the reporters and editors responsible for unflattering content and persuade them to change their minds, or to camouflage unpopular policies in such a way that they, albeit deceptively, appear more attractive. “I, me, myself” is central to the thought processes of the Prime Minister of Canada, and much of his time gets expended on ways of drawing favourable attention to his activities. Some of his advisors, and perhaps Trudeau himself, seem to have a somewhat odd view of what appeals to a particular audience, as witness the (then united) Trudeau family step off their airplane on his arrival in India in 2018.

They were dressed in what to many onlookers was more suitable for a fancy dress ball than to a visit by the Head of Government in a major country to the capital of the world’s largest democracy. His invitation in a get-together to individuals who were connected with violent actions designed to Balkanise India further than was the case in 1947 was not helpful in improving his image as a troublemaker. Trudeau being Trudeau, he refused to acknowledge any impropriety in such actions, and merely doubled down on them thereafter.

The final red line before the patience of the Government of India (GoI) was completely exhausted was his statement to the Canadian parliament that there was “credible evidence” that a gangster connected to drug lords and to terror sympathisers had been killed on the orders of the GoI.

Credible to whom, it may be asked, for what little has been presented as “evidence” for such a sensational claim represents nothing more than conspiracy theories laced with AI simulated data points. The death of H.S. Nijjar has been mourned by Trudeau in a way that was absent in the killing of a Chinese and a Baloch dissident earlier, not to mention numerous casualties in the gang wars that are common in a country where the narcotics trade is increasing at an alarming rate.

Whether it be the narcotics trade, gangland killings, the spreading network of factotums of the State Security Bureau in Beijing, or increasing societal maladjustment caused by the government’s indulgent approach towards children suddenly deciding that it would be exciting to try and become another gender, Canada under Justin Trudeau is not the country it was just a few years ago.

What happened to India is typical of the whimsicality that now permeates politics and policy in Ottawa. Rather than commiserate with a country that *is witnessing Canada-based efforts to revive in Punjab the violence that was infused there in the 1980s courtesy of external troublemakers, Trudeau confused the victim for the perpetrator. He thereby sought to divert attention from the real consequences of his style of governance to an imaginary threat from another country. Trudeau did not blame the country whose State Security operatives go about their tasks with impunity in Canada, but the victim of many of their exertions, India.

Much of what Prime Minister Trudeau has been doing is indefensible, but it needs never to be forgotten that one Trudeau, even a Prime Minister Trudeau, does not make Canada. The effort of the countries that are foes of India and which appear to presently have a decisive voice in the policy portals of Ottawa is to decouple Canada from India. Instead, ties between the two sides need to be reinforced.

There are voices in Canada that are correctly calling for an examination into the way in which the asylum system has been misused to resettle individuals in that country from different corners of the world who are temperamentally alien to moderation and honest work. Voices of dissent against Trudeau’s woke policies need to be supported, not just in the Indian interest, but that of Canada as well. From across India, there are many with the skill and temperament required to become good citizens in Canada, and such a flow needs to increase rather than diminish.

In the US, the impact of the Indian diaspora is visible, especially in politics. Kamala Harris, Nikki Haley, Raja Krishnamurthy and Vivek Ramaswamy are just four of the Indian Americans who are making a mark in the hugely competitive political culture of the world’s most powerful democracy. In Canada, moderates of Indian origin whether Sikh, Hindu, Muslim or Christian need to replace within the councils of political power the radicals who have entered such ranks through gerrymandering.

Houses of worship need to be taken away from the control of those who advocate and who practise violence. Before 9/11, there were several houses of worship in the US where preachers from faraway countries were brought in to give fiery speeches attacking the very country in which they were giving sermons in. To a considerable extent, that situation has altered, and such radicals are no longer welcome in the US. However, they remain frequent visitors to Canada, and this needs to stop before that country too endures a terror attack on the scale of a US 9/11 or an Indian 26/11.

The Canadian people need to be told the backgrounds and activities of terror sympathisers who are being protected by a coalition partner of the Liberal Party in Ottawa. The good news is that as a consequence of Trudeau’s gaffe, for the first time numerous Canadians are beginning to understand the intentions and actions of the radicals in their midst, some holding high office. They have begun questioning Trudeau about his soft corner for them. Throughout much of the 1990s, President Bill Clinton coddled Wahhabis and the CCP.

In the process, he in effect nourished groups that were linked to Al Qaeda and was responsible for the hollowing out of US manufacturing that was transferred to the PRC. Justin Trudeau is walking along the same path as Clinton did. Before greater tragedy strikes Canadian workers and other citizens, the risks that Trudeau is taking with Canada’s future need to be exposed. Not just the US but Canada as well is a natural ally of India. In the din of the present controversy, that truth must never be lost sight of.

Biarritz: Prime Minister Narendra Modi in a conversation with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at the G7 Summit in Biarritz, France on Aug 25, 2019. (Photo: IANS/MEA)

Natural Ally

Boswell writes of Samuel Johnson that the raconteur defined a patron as an individual who idly watched a man at risk of drowning in a lake, only bounding forward to offer him assistance when the swimmer had reached the shore safely. A genuine patron, a true friend, will help the most when the need is most, not step forward when the need has been extinguished.

Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, a man of letters, is remembered in history for the concept of non-alignment, or not aligning with any other power but going it alone. During the 1950s, the PLA was far weaker than it subsequently became, and had efforts been made to enlist the help of countries that were at the time hostile to China, it may have been possible to get together a coalition that could have joined forces with India to drive the PLA from Aksai Chin.

Indeed, there was a compelling case for capturing by force during 1947-48 that third of Kashmir that has since 1947 been forcibly occupied by Pakistan, but that too was not attempted.

Indeed, until the 1970s, the military was looked upon with inner suspicion and spasms of outward derision by the political leadership of the country at Delhi. It was inexplicable that Defence Minister Vengalil Kumaran Krishna Menon ridiculed the Chief of Staff of the Indian Army in public, when he ought to have been giving words of encouragement. Although possessing a brilliant intellect, Menon joined his mentor Nehru in acting as though the real world was the imaginary world that they wished it to be.

Small wonder that countries, several of which had been freed of the colonial yoke because of the freedom struggle of the people of India, steadfastly adopted a policy of non-alignment when it came to the land grab by Pakistan and China at the expense of an already truncated India. It was only after Narendra Modi became Prime Minister of India in 2014 that the foundation agreements underpinning US-India security cooperation were signed, and the Quad was formed with India joining Australia, Japan and the US in a partnership designed to ensure a free, open and inclusive Indo-Pacific.

Canada is as much a natural partner of India as Australia is, the difference being that Ottawa does not understand this truth in the way that Canberra does. Or Tokyo and Washington, for that matter. Many scars and scabs have been left behind in the minds of several Indians from the time of Cold War 1.0, when India was seen by many in the US as being a satellite of the USSR. As a consequence, anti-US sentiment forms a strong sediment even in the strategic discourse of several policymakers.

Hence, verbal sallies from Blinken and Sullivan that are transparently designed to assuage the wounded feelings of Justin Trudeau at the lack of support he has been getting from within NATO in his tirade against India, have resulted in an eruption of anti-US sentiment in India. Such a sentiment is not supported by either facts or by national interest. The US and India need each other, and the unmerited rant by Trudeau in the Canadian parliament against India is not going to diminish the need for Delhi and Washington to work together in ensuring that a new hegemon does not threaten global security.

It is a matter of astonishment that an individual who has been chosen as the Prime Minister of one of the countries friendliest to India should be so hostile to our country, but it would be unfair, possibly inaccurate, to portray such a dislike as being motivated by a compulsion to protect the interests of China, a country where the leadership is visibly unhappy at the growing closeness between the West and India, or between India and the Global South. What is more likely is that Justin Trudeau does not have an instinct for the big picture, but concentrates his attention and his activity on the moods and perceived requirements of the day, whatever these may be, and however harmful they may be to the overall interests of Canada and its people.

In the din of Trudeau’s false charge against India, what ought not to be lost sight of is the reality of Canada being a natural partner of India, and the need to ensure that when the country gets a Prime Minister of a higher calibre than Trudeau, Ottawa and Delhi become as close as Washington and Delhi have become since Prime Minister Modi took over as the Pradhan Sevak of Bharat, i.e., India.

ALSO READ: Trudeau apologises for honouring Nazi veteran

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Musk Calls Out Canadian PM Over Free Speech

Musk reacted after the Canadian government made it compulsory for online streaming platforms to register with the government for “regulatory controls”….reports Asian Lite News

Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk on Monday slammed Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau for trying to crush free speech in his country, saying this is “shameful”.

He reacted after the Canadian government made it compulsory for online streaming platforms to register with the government for “regulatory controls”.

Author-Journalist Glenn Greenwald posted on X: “The Canadian government, armed with one of the world’s most repressive online censorship schemes, announces that all online streaming services that offer podcasts must formally register with the government to permit regulatory controls”.

Musk reacted: “Trudeau is trying to crush free speech in Canada. Shameful.”

When one of his followers posted that Trudeau should change his name to “Falsedeau”, the tech billionaire reacted with a crying face emoji.

Meanwhile, External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar said that India’s diplomatic row with Canada was discussed in his meeting with top US officials — Secretary of State Antony Blinken and National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan — and he gave them both an exhaustive account of India’s case, which included its assessment of “a very permissive Canadian attitude towards terrorists”.

The US has been supportive of Canada’s allegation that India was behind the killing of Khalistani activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar in British Columbia in June.

The US has publicly and privately urged India to cooperate with the investigation.

New Delhi has dismissed the allegations as “absurd” but has said that if Canada has anything, it would take a look at it.

But Ottawa has not provided any evidence to India or presented it publicly.

ALSO READ: ‘India Needs ‘Musks’ In Space Sector’

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Canada had better watch out!

Canada has thus the dubious distinction of having become a hospitable country for terrorists, gangsters, and radicals. That is to say that one is talking here not only about pro-Khalistan elements but other individuals too, mostly with criminal backgrounds, who reportedly use fake identities and documents to gain entry into Canada and the US … writes Dr Sakariya Kareem

Patrick Brown, the Mayor of Brampton, reportedly told the Canadian media that the police had examined the video showing the float in which two Sikhs were shown killing former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, and concluded that it did not translate into a hate crime.

This statement sums up the attitude of the Canadian authorities towards pro-Khalistani elements operating from Canadian soil. While the freedom of expression is undoubtedly a right, to suggest that Canadian citizens (in this case Sikhs) can go around eulogizing the assassination of a former Indian Prime Minister with the government taking little or no notice sends out a clear signal as to which side of the fence the government of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau sits on. This by the way, is not a recent instance, and it is on record that his father Pierre Trudeau refused to extradite a known criminal, who would later be responsible for the bombing of the Air India flight Kanishka over Ireland in 1985, in which 329 people died.

Sidhu Moosewala (left) and accused Satinderjit Singh Brar a.k.a Goldy Brar (right).

Canada has thus the dubious distinction of having become a hospitable country for terrorists, gangsters, and radicals. That is to say that one is talking here not only about pro-Khalistan elements but other individuals too, mostly with criminal backgrounds, who reportedly use fake identities and documents to gain entry into Canada and the US. These criminal gangs intermix with radicals have created a heady mix posing a serious threat not only to countries around the world, but also for the safety of the North American continent at large. Several wanted criminals from the Indian state of Punjab have reportedly used false papers to reach North American shores. Notable among them is Anmol Bishnoi, the younger brother of the notorious gangster Lawrence Bishnoi.

Anmol, accused of being part of the network that executed Sidhu Moosewala, fled India using a forged passport. His blatant disregard for law enforcement was evident when a video of him dancing at a California wedding went viral. For those historically minded, it might be a good thing to recall that Hardeep Singh Nijjar who was killed as a result of a criminal gang war (18 June) outside a Gurudwara in Surrey had also entered Canada in 1997 on a false passport.

Furthermore, there is Goldy Brar, the mastermind behind the Moosewala case, who also obtained a Canadian visitor visa on fake documents, despite having 21 First Information Reports (FIRs) lodged against him in India. Another character in this gallery of gangsters is Rinku Randhawa, who reportedly moved to Canada using forged papers. Arsh Dalla, involved in several violent crimes in India, similarly secured Canadian permanent residency via counterfeit documents. It’s not just gangsters; but Khalistani radicals also seem to find solace in Canada and parts of the US, particularly California. India’s National Investigation Agency had recently released a list of ten Khalistani’s who targeted the Indian consulate in San Francisco.

The surge of these wanted criminals and radicals raises a vital question – is Canada’s immigration system flawed, or is there a larger political game in play? Critics argue that the Trudeau government, under the guise of free speech and human rights, is reluctant to clamp down on these individuals, possibly for political gains. The Liberal Party government headed by Justin Trudeau has a political alignment in the Canadian Parliament with the New Democratic Party which is headed by Jagmeet Singh, a known Khalistan sympathizer.

Yet, these allegations and concerns pose a threat not only to India’s national security but also to the safety of Canadian citizens. The leniency shown in granting visas and the subsequent conversion of visitor visas to work ones, especially for individuals with criminal records, is alarming. While political expediency is understandable, the risks to Canada’s national security are great.

For instance, Canada’s retraction of Sikh extremism from its 2018 terrorist threat report, amidst political pressure, smacked of opportunism and a soft corner for Khalistan elements. Justin Trudeau’s presence at a Khalsa Day event in 2017, the cold Indian reception during his State visit in 2018 and G20 Summit meeting with Prime Minister Modi have all followed a familiar pattern, one that speaks more of Trudeau’s closeness to Khalistan elements in Canada than to better relations with India. Given his public sympathy for the pro-Khalistan Sikhs in Canada, Trudeau’s allegations that India had a hand in the killing of Hardeep Singh Nijjar make sense. But that is not the real reason for this unsubstantiated allegation made on the floor of the House of Commons.

The reason is to hide the spectre of foreign interference from China in Canada, claims senior Canadian journalist, Daniel Boardman. He says in an interview to Asian News International (ANI) that there is an enormous threat of China meddling in Canada. As Justin Trudeau’s Liberal party has during elections sought support from the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), the story on India was necessary to move the spectrum away from Chinese foreign involvement.

Boardman traces the Liberal Party’s links to the CCP in the election cycles and alleges that Trudeau made a deal with the Chinese to keep two Canadian citizens in jail in 2018, when Huawei chief Meng Wangzhou was arrested by the RCMP. Boardman correctly surmises that “….in order to shift the spectrum from Chinese foreign interference, we have a story in Canada, which is essentially a story about Pakistani foreign interference, being framed as a story of Indian foreign interference to cover up the real story, which is Chinese interference.”

Earlier in May 2023, Canada had designated Chinese diplomat Zhao Wei as ‘persona non-grata’ following an uproar over allegations of political meddling. This was done because he was threatening the family of sitting MP Micheal Chong. Bordman notes that Trudeau took this action for symbolic reasons.  Boardman told ANI that Canadian foreign policy issues have been jumbled up by the Liberals in the media internally in Canada and sold out to Canadians. The point is that Canada’s reputation as a country in the international community of nations is at stake. By permitting Chinese meddling in domestic politics and playing to the gallery with pro-Khalistani elements, Justin Trudeau is harming his own political future. Pertinently, the influx of criminals and radicals could lead to a severe law and order situation, if not tackled proactively. Canada must reevaluate and strengthen its immigration policies to ensure that its hospitality is not abused by those with malicious intentions.

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Jaishankar sharpens attack on Canada

External Affairs Minister says that India has provided Canada with a lot of information, and there has been a large number of extradition requests…reports Asian Lite News

Amid the ongoing India-Canada row, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar highlighted the “organised crime, related to secessionist forces, violence and extremism” in Canada, raising concerns over them being “very permissive” due to political reasons.

Speaking at the ‘Discussion at Council on Foreign Relations’ in New York, Jaishankar said, “In the last few years, Canada actually has seen a lot of organized crime, relating to the secessionist forces, organized crime, violence and extremism. They’re all very, very deeply mixed up. So in fact, we have been talking about specifics and information.”

He further stressed that the Indian government has provided the Canadian side with a lot of information about the crime, and there has been a large number of extradition requests.

“We have given them a lot of information about organized crime and leadership, which operates out of Canada. There are a large number of extradition requests. There are terrorist leaders, who have been identified,” he added.

The EAM raised concern over these incidents of threats to Indian diplomats and attacks on Indian consulates, stating that these are “very permissive” because of political reasons.

“Our concern is that it’s really been very permissive, because of political reasons. So we have a situation where our diplomats are threatened, our consulates have been attacked…A lot of this is often justified, as saying that’s how democracies work. If somebody gives me something specific, it doesn’t have to be restricted to Canada. But if there’s any incident which is an issue and somebody gives me something specific, as a government, I would look at it,” Jaishankar further said.

Regarding PM Trudeau’s allegations, Jaishankar assured that the Indian side will take action if the Canadian side provides specific information in connection with Khalistani leader Hardeep Nijjar’s killing.

“We told the Canadians that this is not the government of India’s policy. Secondly, we said if you have something specific and if you have something relevant, let us know. We are open to looking at it…The picture is not complete without the context in a way,” he said.

Notably, Canada has yet to provide any public evidence to support the claim about the slaying of Hardeep Singh Nijjar.

Early last week, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made an explosive statement accusing the Indian government of being involved in the killing of Khalistani terrorist Hardeep Singh Nijjar – a claim that India has outrightly rejected, calling it ‘absurd’ and ‘motivated’.

India has suspended its visa services in Canada, following Canadian Prime Minister Trudeau’s allegations of Indian involvement in the killing.

Amid strained ties, India issued an advisory for its citizens and those who are travelling to Canada to exercise “utmost caution in view of growing anti-India activities and politically-condoned hate crimes and criminal violence” in the country.

(180710) — RIGA, July 10, 2018 (Xinhua) — Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks during a joint press conference with Latvian Prime Minister Maris Kucinskis (not seen in picture) in Riga, Latvia, on July 10, 2018. Trudeau pledged sustained commitment to Latvia’s security during his visit to Riga on Tuesday, saying that Canada would extend its leadership of the NATO battalion stationed in the Baltic country for four more years. (Xinhua/Janis)

‘Row didn’t come up in Jaishankar’s meeting with Blinken’

US State Department on Wednesday informed that the India-Canada diplomatic standoff regarding the killing of Khalistani terrorist Hardeep Singh Nijjar didn’t come up during last week’s meeting between External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar and Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

Jaishankar had met his US counterpart Blinken in New York on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) session. Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong and Japanese Foreign Minister Yoko Kamikawa were also present at the Quad meeting.

“That was not a bilateral meeting. It was a meeting of a number of countries. Did not come up in that meeting. We have engaged with our Indian counterparts on this issue and urged them to fully cooperate with the Canadian investigation,” said State Department spokesperson Mathew Miller, while answering to India-Canada diplomatic row.

“As we have made clear, we have raised this. We have engaged with our Indian counter on this and encouraged them to cooperate with the Canadian investigation and we continue to encourage them to cooperate,” he added.

Early last week, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made an explosive statement accusing the Indian government of being involved in the killing of Khalistani terrorist Hardeep Singh Nijjar.

However, India has outrightly rejected the claims, calling it ‘absurd’ and ‘motivated’.

Earlier, Antony Blinken had said that Washington is “deeply concerned” about the allegations made by the Canadian PM about the Indian government’s involvement in the killing of Khalistani terrorist Hardeep Singh Nijjar, adding that the US wants to see accountability and called it “important” that the investigation runs its course and leads to the result.

“We are deeply concerned about the allegations that Prime Minister Trudeau has raised. We have been consulting throughout very closely with our Canadian colleagues, and not just consulting, coordinating with them on this issue,” Blinken said.

ALSO READ: Canada Parliament Speaker Quits After Praising Ukrainian Nazi Veteran

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Trudeau apologises for honouring Nazi veteran

Canada Prime Minister said what happened was “deeply, deeply painful” to Jewish people and the many millions who were targeted by the Nazi genocide….reports Asian Lite News

On behalf of Canada, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has apologised for honoring a Ukrainian man in Parliament who fought for a Nazi unit during the Second World War.

In a statement on Wednesday, Trudeau said: “This is a mistake that deeply embarrassed parliament and Canada,” the BBC reported.

“All of us who were in this House on Friday regret deeply having stood and clapped even though we did so unaware of the context… It was a horrendous violation of the memory of the millions of people who died in the Holocaust.”

He said what happened was “deeply, deeply painful” to Jewish people and the many millions who were targeted by the Nazi genocide.

Trudeau also apologised directly to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who was visiting Canada and present in Parliament at the time of the incident on September 22, saying: “Canada is deeply sorry.”

Zelensky was among those pictured applauding the 98-year-old Yaroslav Hunka, who had served in the 14th Waffen-SS Grenadier Division, a voluntary unit made up mostly of ethnic Ukrainians under Nazi command.

The Division members have been accused of killing Polish and Jewish civilians, although the unit has not been found guilty of any war crimes by a tribunal.

In the Canadian Parliament, Hunka got a standing ovation and was praised as a Ukrainian and Canadian “hero”.

Trudeau’s apology comes a day after Parliament Speaker Anthony Rota, who has assumed responsibility for inviting the veteran, resigned, saying he was not aware of Hunka’s Nazi ties.

“The Speaker was solely responsible for the invitation and recognition of this man, and has wholly accepted that responsibility and stepped down,” the BBC quoted the Prime Minister as saying in his statement on Wednesday.

The incident has drawn widespread condemnation.

Pierre Poilievre, leader of Canada’s opposition Conservative Party, called the incident the “biggest single diplomatic embarrassment” in Canada’s history.

Canadian Jewish organisation Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies has said “questions remain as to how this debacle occurred”.

The debacle has also played into Russia’s accusations that Ukraine is run by neo-Nazis, even though Zelensky is himself Jewish.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov expressed outrage about the Canadian honour and said: “Many Western countries, including Canada, have raised a young generation that does not know who fought whom or what happened during the Second World War.”

ALSO READ: Canada Parliament Speaker Quits After Praising Ukrainian Nazi Veteran

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No Delay in Nijjar Murder Probe, Say Canadian Police

The RCMP’s Surrey division provided clarification, revealing that the murder of Nijjar in a gurdwara parking lot on June 18 involved a minimum of six individuals and two vehicles….reports Asian Lite news

Dismissing a media report which claimed that there was a delay in initial response to the fatal shooting of hard-line Khalistan leader Hardeep Singh Nijjar, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) said its officers reached the scene within four minutes of the incident.

The clarification from the RCMP’s Surrey division came after a Washington Post report said on Monday that at least six people and two vehicles were involved in the murder of Nijjar in the parking lot of a gurdwara in Surrey on June 18.

Quoting witnesses, the report said that it took between 12 and 20 minutes after the gunshots that police arrived.

“The first 911 call in relation to this incident was received at 8.27 p.m. and the first officers arrived on scene in under four minutes, with more officers arriving on scene shortly after,” the Surrey RCMP said in a statement released on Tuesday to “correct misinformation surrounding the actions of our officers”.

The report also cited a witness as saying that there was an “hours-long tussle” between Surrey Police and the RCMP over leading the investigation, leading to further delay.

“It was suggested that there was a conflict regarding which police agency would head the investigation, however as the police of jurisdiction, Surrey RCMP is responsible for all police investigations in Surrey,” the Canadian law enforcement stated.

It further stated that “there is nothing to indicate this investigation was delayed in any way, either in the initial response or in subsequent investigative steps”.

However, the RCMP acknowledged having received a request from an ‘international media outlet’ on September 23, which contained a list of questions directed at multiple police agencies with a deadline the following day.

“This did not provide an adequate opportunity to respond. Subsequently a story was published which contained inaccurate information on the police response to this homicide,” the RCMP statement read.

The Integrated Homicide Investigation Team (IHIT), which mostly takes lead on all homicide investigations in Canada, was called out and assumed conduct of the probe Surrey RCMP’s support.

“We are confident all necessary investigational steps are being taken to hold those responsible for the homicide accountable,” the statement said.

Calling the incident a “public act of violence which has caused members of our community to feel unsafe”, the Surrey RCMP said it has increased patrols around gurdwaras and temples.

Further, the Surrey RCMP’s Diversity Unit has met with the Sikh and Hindu communities in the British Colubian city, and the unit continues to work closely with them to foster communication and engagement.

ALSO READ: Canada Parliament Speaker Quits After Praising Ukrainian Nazi Veteran

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Canada Parliament Speaker Quits After Praising Ukrainian Nazi Veteran

Rota’s move comes amid days of steadily growing pressure from MPs of all parties for him to “do the honourable thing” and vacate the Speaker’s Chair…reports Asian Lite News

Anthony Rota has resigned as the Speaker of the Canadian Parliament over his invitation to, and the House’s subsequent recognition of, a man who fought for a Nazi unit during the Second World War, media reported.

Rota announced his unprecedented decision to step aside after meeting with the House leaders from all parties on Parliament Hill on Tuesday afternoon. His move comes amid days of steadily growing pressure from MPs of all parties for him to “do the honourable thing” and vacate the Speaker’s Chair, CTV News reported.

“The work of this House is above any of us. Therefore, I must step down as your Speaker,” Rota said, adding he was making the announcement with a “heavy heart” and that serving as House Speaker has been his “greatest honour”.

The incident that led to this historic scene unfolding in the House of Commons took place during Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s address to Canadian Parliament last Friday, CTV News reported.

Rota apologized first on Sunday, and then again to all MPs on Monday, taking full responsibility for the mistake, and for not being aware until after the controversy exploded of his constituent’s historic involvement with the Waffen-SS Galicia Division.

Rota, has apologised for praising a Ukrainian man Yaroslav Hunka, who served in a Nazi unit during World War II.

Hunka, 98, was sitting in the gallery and got a standing ovation in Canadian Parliament after Rota said he was a “hero” during a visit by Ukrainian President Zelensky, BBC reported.

Canadian Jewish group CIJA said it was “deeply troubled” that a veteran of a Nazi division that participated in the genocide of Jews had been celebrated.

It said this should never happen again, BBC reported. 

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was with Zelensky in the Parliament at the time.

Thousands of Ukrainians fought on the German side during the war, but millions more served in the Soviet Red Army.

In a statement, Rota said that on September 22, “in my remarks following the address of the President of Ukraine, I recognised an individual in the gallery. I have subsequently become aware of more information which causes me to regret my decision to do so”.

The Speaker added that “no one, including fellow parliamentarians and the Ukraine delegation, was aware of my intention or of my remarks before I delivered them. This initiative was entirely my own, the individual in question being from my riding [district] and having been brought to my attention”, BBC reported.

ALSO READ: “Political Convenience Must Not..”: Jaishankar’s Veiled Attack on Canada

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Canadian Sikh MP Reveals ‘Clear’ Intelligence on Foreign Government’s Role in Killing

Trudeau’s Liberal, which is short of the majority mark in the 338-member House of Commons, depends on Singh’s NDP for survival…reports Asian Lite News

Canadian Sikh MP Jagmeet Singh said the country has “clear” and “credible intelligence” that lays out that a foreign government was involved in the killing of its citizen and pro-Khalistan hardliner Hardeep Singh Nijjar, and that the fear of Sikhs being targeted in Canada is a “very real”.

Stating that he received two intelligence briefings, including one from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Singh told reporters on Tuesday: “I can confirm what the prime minister has shared publicly — that there is clear intelligence that Canada has that lays out the following case that a Canadian citizen was killed on Canadian soil and a foreign government was involved.”

“That intelligence is something that I think is very credible,” Singh, the leader of New Democratic Party (NDP), an ally of the ruling Liberal Party, said.

Trudeau’s Liberal, which is short of the majority mark in the 338-member House of Commons, depends on Singh’s NDP for survival.

The leader, who is perceived as a Khalistan supporter in India, said that the fear of Sikhs being targeted in Canada is a “very real fear”.

“For a long time, members of the Sikh community have been have been targeted by actions of the Indian government, and for a long time that has gone often unnoticed or unrecognised,” he said.

“For a lot of people hearing the Prime Minister of a G7 nation provide intelligence that connects the killing of a Canadian on Canadian soil by foreign government really confirmed a lot of the fears that people have felt and it made those fears even more real and more tangible. So it is very hurtful and harmful to a lot of people who have now really felt validated but also are more free than ever.”

He also claimed that members of other diaspora communities from India, who have been targeted because of their human rights activism, also “share that fear”, and are critical of “Indian government or the government policies”.

“I speak of other religious minority communities like Muslims, other communities that are oppressed like women and groups that are from low caste backgrounds or tribal backgrounds who’ve expressed very deep concerns about the treatment that they’ve received. They’re also feeling that real sense of fear and worry,” he claimed.

Earlier, Singh had spoken to his constituents, promising to get to the bottom of the truth behind Nijjar’s murder just after Trudeau’s allegations against India.

On being asked about the public release of the evidence, Singh said that information will be made public in an appropriate manner, and doing it early “would jeopardise the investigation and jeopardise the work that’s being done”.

“This is unprecedented intelligence that has come forward and that is why we’re going to continue to urge that the Canadian government have a thorough investigation that those responsible are brought forward,” the NDP leader said.

Singh told reporters that he was able to request the briefing on the matter because of the top-secret security clearance he obtained to review foreign-interference materials prepared by former governor general David Johnston, the CTV news channel reported.

Relations between India and Canada nosedived after allegations levelled by Trudeau over the involvement of officials of Indian agencies in the murder case of Nijjar, who was shot dead outside a gurdwara in Surrey in June.

Calling the claims “absurd”, India’s government has accused Canada of not providing evidence to back up its claim.

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Baloch Leader Questions Canada’s Silence on Activist’s ‘Mysterious’ Death

The BVA President stated that they submitted a document to the Canadian government seeking an update on the case but received no follow-up from Canadian authorities….reports Asian Lite News

The President of Baloch Voice Association (BVA), Munir Mengal on Tuesday questioned the Canadian authorities for not investigating the “mysterious” death of Human rights activist, Karima Baloch and requested them to public the evidence they found in the case.

“To the Canadian government and particularly to the Prime Minister of Canada, we Baloch are looking to your organization and we are asking you please do reinvestigate the case of Karima Baloch and whatever facts your organizations, your authorities, your police has. Please publish that and give us under what circumstances she was killed and who was behind that killing,” Mengal said.

BVA President shared that a document was given to the Canadian government to seek response from them about the update in the case but he said they didn’t get any follow-up from the Canadian authorities.

He added, “We submitted a document to the Canadian embassy and they said that we will contact our government and we will reply you as soon as possible. Unfortunately, approximately three years passed. Till now, we have not received any information from the Canadian authorities when Karima was eliminated. And after that, we saw a statement by the police authorities that there’s no wrong doing in the case of her death.”

Claiming that his organisation has lots of evidence against the Pakistan security force ISI and alleged that ISI is behind the killing of Baloch based Human rights activists.

Karima Baloch (Image from Twitter)

Mengal further said, “Baloch people, we as an organization, we have a lot of evidences that in such sort of cases there’s the Pakistani secret services that’s called ISI. And she’s very much notorious and she has a lot of experience with respect to this. And there are many cases and incidents that Pakistani security forces ISI has done this sort of killings where their hands are masked.”

Karima Baloch was a Baloch human rights activist and a dissident. She was granted asylum in Canada in 2016. She was found dead after having gone missing in Dec 2020 in Toronto.

She was slated to be buried on January 25, but, before the corpse could be transported from Karachi to Balochistan, Pakistani authorities forcibly took Karima’s body along with her family from the airport to her hometown, Balochwarna reported.

Later, she was buried under Army watch as thousands who came to pay their last respect weren’t allowed near her, the Balochistan Times reported. Prior to her burial, the mobile services were suspended in the district, and Tump and surrounding areas were put under strict lockdown.

Karima’s death sparked protests across Europe and North America as the Baloch diaspora took to the streets in Toronto, Berlin and Netherlands calling on the Canadian government to investigate.

Karima had campaigned vigorously against the disappearances and human rights violations in the troubled Balochistan province of Pakistan. (ANI)

ALSO READ: Sri Lanka Backs India on Canada’s Allegations

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India Turns The Heat On Khalistanis

Interpol issues Red Corner Notice against Karanvir Singh, a member of the banned terrorist group Babbar Khalsa International believed to be hiding in Pakistan…reports Asian Lite News

The International Criminal Police Organization, commonly known as Interpol, on Monday issued a Red Corner Notice against Karanvir Singh, a member of the banned terrorist group Babbar Khalsa International.

Interpol updated its website by putting out a Red Corner Notice for the Khalistani leader.

According to intelligence sources, Singh is believed to be hiding in Pakistan and was a member of the pro-Khalistan terrorist group Babbar Khalsa International.

As per the Interpol portal, 38-year-old Karanvir Singh has roots in Punjab’s Kapurthala district.

Further, according to Interpol, Singh is wanted by India for criminal conspiracy, murder, offences related to the Arms Act, and Explosive Substances Act, raising funds for terrorist acts, conspiracy, and being a member of a terrorist gang or organisation.

A Red Corner Notice is a request to the law enforcement authorities of Interpol’s member countries to find and temporarily detain a person until extradition, surrender, or a similar legal process can take place.

Earlier, Interpol issued a Red Notice to all member countries against gangster Himanshu alias Bhau, who is believed to be living abroad.

Giving details, a spokesman of Haryana Police said Rohtak Police succeeded in getting a Red Corner Notice issued against a most wanted accused, who is believed to have fled abroad.

The Red Corner Notice against the wanted pro-Khalistani leader comes amid a diplomatic spat between New Delhi and Ottawa in the wake of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s claim of an India hand in the killing of Sikh separatist leader Hardeep Singh Nijjar.

New Delhi dismissed the allegations, calling them ‘absurd’ and ‘motivated’.

At a news conference in New York, the Canadian PM, however, failed to present any evidence to back his claim of Indian involvement in Nijjar’s killing. Trudeau was repeatedly quizzed on the nature of the allegations but stuck to reiterating that there were “credible reasons” to believe that India was linked to Nijjar’s death.

“There are credible reasons to believe that agents of the Government of India were involved in the killing of a Canadian on Canadian soil. That is …there is something of utmost foundational importance in a country’s rule of law in a world where international rules-based order matters,” Trudeau said.

“We call upon the Government of India to take seriously this matter and to work with us to shed full transparency and ensure accountability and justice in this matter,” the Canadian PM added.

According to CBC News, the Canadian government invested both human and signal intelligence in a months-long investigation into Nijjar’s death. That intelligence includes communications involving Indian diplomats present in Canada.

The Ministry of External Affairs on Thursday, however, said no information has been shared by Canada with regard to the killing of Nijjar.

“We are willing to look at any specific information that is provided to us, but so far we have received no specific information from Canada,” Arindam Bagchi, the spokesperson for the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA), said during a briefing.

A designated terrorist in India, Nijjar was shot dead outside a Sikh temple in Surrey, British Columbia, on June 18.

‘Terrorists have found safe haven in Canada’

Meanwhile, reacting to the India-Canada diplomatic row, Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Ali Sabry has said that terrorists have found safe haven in the North American country and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has this way of coming out with outrageous allegations.

The Sri Lankan Foreign Minister further added that he is “not surprised” by his comments as Trudeau comes out with “outrageous and substantiated allegations.”

“Some of the terrorists have found safe haven in Canada. The Canadian PM has this way of just coming out with some outrageous allegations without any supporting proof. The same thing they did for Sri Lanka, a terrible, total lie about saying that Sri Lanka had a genocide. Everybody knows there was no genocide in our country”, said Sri Lankan Foreign Minister.

Taking a dig at Trudeau for honouring a former Nazi soldier in Canada’s parliament, he said, “I saw yesterday he had gone and given a rousing welcome to somebody who has associated with the Nazis in the past during the Second World War. So, this is questionable and we have dealt with it in the past. I am not surprised that sometimes PM Trudeau comes out with outrageous and substantiated allegations.”

On September 22, during Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelenskyy’s speech in Canada’s Parliament, 98-year-old Ukrainian Yaroslav Hunka, who served in the first Ukrainian division, also known as the SS division “Galicia” during World War II was honoured by the Speaker of the House of Commons of Canada.

ALSO READ-Sri Lanka Backs India on Canada’s Allegations