Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Unfair to raise my decades-old criminal conviction, says Atwal ›

- Press Trust of India

Trudeau should insist he will not attend events where killers of innocent people are glorified. Canadian politician­s, including the PM, must start appreciati­ng India’s deep sensitivit­ies on this issue.

TORONTO: Convicted Khalistani “terrorist” Jaspal Atwal, who kicked up a controvers­y over an invitation to him by the Canadian mission in India to dine with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, on Thursday said it was unfair to raise his “criminal conviction” for a shooting incident in 1986.

Trudeau’s India visit plunged into controvers­y over the dinner invitation to Atwal by the Canadian high commission­er to India.

High commission­er Nadir Patel cancelled the invite for the dinner, hosted for Trudeau, while the external affairs ministry said it will “ascertain” how Atwal entered India.

Atwal told Canada’s Postmedia that he did not plan to attend the dinner as he was in Mumbai on business, The Vancouver Sun reported.

Atwal said it was unfair to raise his criminal conviction for shooting a visiting Punjabi cabinet minister Malkiat Singh Sidhu on Vancouver Island in 1986 given how long ago the crime occurred, the daily said.

He blamed “enemies” for circulatin­g the photos obtained by Postmedia and stressed that he travelled to India on his own on February 11 and is not part of any official government delegation.

Atwal said in a series of text messages on Wednesday that he was in India for Media Waves, a Surrey online radio station.

The pictures of him and Gregoire Trudeau, as well as infrastruc­ture minister Amarjeet Sohi, were taken at an event in Mumbai, Atwal said.

At the time of the 1986 shooting, Atwal was a Sikh separatist active in the pro-khalistan Internatio­nal Sikh Youth Federation. He and three others were convicted in 1987 of trying to kill Sidhu on an isolated road near Gold River. The then Punjab minister was visiting British Colombia for his nephew’s wedding.

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