The Weekly Voice

India-Canada friction Ottawa must rein in separatist­s

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DAYS after the Canadian police arrested three Indian nationals in the Hardeep Singh Nijjar murder case, India’s High Commission­er to Canada Sanjay Kumar Verma has stated that Sikh separatist groups in that country are crossing ‘a big red line’. He said this matter was a cause for concern for New Delhi as it pertained to its territoria­l integrity and national security. The India-Canada relations have been facing rough weather ever since Canadian PM Justin Trudeau announced in September last year that the alleged role of Indian government agents in the Nijjar case was being probed.

The two countries are trying to resolve the current issue, Verma said, but he hastened to add that

Canada’s misunderst­anding of ‘decades-old issues’ was to blame for the deeper problems underlying the recent ‘negative’ developmen­ts. The latest provocatio­n was the chanting of anti-India slogans by Khalistan supporters during a Sikh parade in Ontario last week. Late last month, pro-Khalistan slogans had been raised at a public event attended by Trudeau and other leaders in Toronto, prompting India to reiterate that Canada was giving political space to ‘separatism, extremism and violence’.

New Delhi is worried not only about the use of Canadian territory for anti-India propaganda but also the security of its diplomatic representa­tives in the Maple Country. The Ministry of External Affairs has stated that it expects the Trudeau government to ensure that the diplomats are able to carry out their responsibi­lities without fear. The ball is in Canada’s court. Being a democratic country which respects the rule of law, Ottawa needs to crack down on rabble-rousers who glorify and incite violence. It should not allow itself to be intimidate­d by radical elements which are misusing freedom of expression. Antagonisi­ng an old ally like India, the fastest-growing major economy in the world, will be detrimenta­l to Canada’s geopolitic­al and economic interests.

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