Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Canada doesn’t support separatist movement, Trudeau ‘tells’ Capt

- Surjit Singh and Anil Sharma letterschd@himndustan­times.com

AMRITSAR: Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Wednesday assured Punjab chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh that his country does not support any separatist movement in India or elsewhere.

Trudeau gave the ‘assurance’ during his 40-minute meeting with Amarinder at a hotel here during which the latter handed over a list of nine Canada-based operatives alleged to be involved in hate crimes in Punjab by financing and supplying weapons for terrorist activities and also engaged in trying to radicalise youth and children. The CM urged him to take action against such elements.

“Really happy to receive categorica­l assurance from Canadian PM@Justin Trudeau that his country does not support any separatist movement. His words are a big relief to all of us here in India and we look forward to his government’s support in tackling fringe separatist elements,” Amarinder tweeted after the meeting. The issue figured in talks between the two leaders in presence of

Canadian defence minister Harjit Singh Sajjan whom Amarinder had refused to meet in April 2017 alleging that he was a ‘Khalistani sympathise­r’.

The Khalistan issue had led to a standoff between Capt and the ruling establishm­ent in Canada. This time too, there was intense speculatio­n about whether the chief minister would meet Sajjan or not. In the morning, Raveen Thukral, media adviser to chief minister, tweeted that Amarinder would interact with the six Canadian minsters (including Sajjan) on request from the Government of Canada.

Trudeau and his ministers came to the meeting after paying obeisance at the Golden Temple and visiting the Partition Museum. After receiving the visiting Prime Minister, Amarinder shook hands with Sajjan during the discussion and the two also exchanged smiles. Trudeau is the second Canadian PM to visit the city after Stephen Harper who visited the Golden Temple in 2009.

The Trudeau-Amarinder meeting is being seen as a step towards breaking the ice. “Citing the separatist movement in Quebec, Trudeau said he had dealt with such threats all his life and was fully aware of the dangers of violence, which he had always pushed back with all his might,” Thukral said. During the meeting, Amarinder called for cooperatio­n between India and Canada on the issues of terrorism, crime and drugs, while seeking greater sharing of relevant informatio­n, in the interest of national and internatio­nal security.

“Responding to concerns raised in some quarters on reports of human rights violations, the chief minister said any aberration­s were always dealt with strictly, with even policemen being sent to jail by the courts in such cases.

He reiterated his government’s firm commitment to the protection of human rights of all individual­s”, Thukral disclosed.

The two leaders agreed on the importance of strengthen­ing cooperatio­n between their countries across various areas of bilateral relations, with the CM expressing Punjab’s keenness to engage with Canada in several vital domains related to economic cooperatio­n.

The two leaders agreed to collaborat­e through joint projects aimed at facilitati­ng progress of both, Canada and India.

Amarinder identified higher education, scientific research and technology, innovation and start-ups as some of the areas in which Canada could contribute to the developmen­t of Punjab, whose people continue to play an important role in the progress of that country.

Captain Amarinder pre- sented gifts to Trudeau’s three children.

The chief minister’s chief principal secretary Suresh Kumar and chief secretary Karan Avatar Singh were also present in the meeting.

Earlier, Trudeau landed at Sri Guru Ram Dass Ji Internatio­nal Airport in Amritsar at around 11:00 am.

He was received and welcomed by Union minister Hardeep Singh Puri and Punjab’s local government minister Navjot Singh Sidhu.

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