Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Canada PMO blamed for inviting Atwal to India

- Anirudh Bhattachar­yya

TORONTO: The Canadian Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) may have been responsibl­e for inviting to official receptions during Justin Trudeau’s visit to India in February a man convicted of attempting to assassinat­e a Punjab minister.

The invitation resulted in rapid fraying of relations between the two countries.

The revelation is among the highlights of a 50-page special report prepared by the National Security and Intelligen­ce Committee of Parliament­arians (NSICOP) and tabled in Canada’s Parliament on Monday.

The report states that the Canadian high commission in New Delhi prepared the invitation lists for official receptions in Mumbai and New Delhi and provided them to the PMO.

On February 10, before Trudeau’s arrival in India, the “Prime Minister’s Office added an additional 423 names to the list of invitees and instructed the High Commission to extend invitation­s to those individual­s for both events,” the report said. It added that “included on the Canadian Prime Minister’s Office list” was Jaspal Atwal, who was convicted on terror charges related to the Khalistan movement when he attempted to assassinat­e a visiting minister from Punjab state in 1986.

Atwal’s presence at the Mumbai reception on February 20, where he was photograph­ed with Trudeau’s wife, triggered a controvers­y that led to the high commission rescinding his invitation to a second event in New Delhi. The damage was aggravated when then National Security and Intelligen­ce Advisor Daniel Jean briefed Canadian reporters and alleged that “rogue elements” in India may have tried to sabotage Trudeau’s visit.

Examining the charge that “foreign interferen­ce” was part of the parliament­ary committee’s mandate, but its findings in this regard were all redacted in the report that was released. The panel delivered its report to Trudeau on October 12 and these redactions were undertaken on his instructio­ns. The “Prime Minister directed the committee to remove informatio­n deemed injurious to national security and internatio­nal relations from the document,” a statement by the committee’s secretaria­t said.

The result may be that the report will do little to repair relations between India and Canada, which have been bedevilled by these allegation­s.

Indo-canadian MP Randeep Sarai had in February owned responsibi­lity for inviting Atwal, but later recanted from that position. The report states: “Some of the issues raised by Mr Atwal’s appearance in India should have been more properly addressed by the PM’S Office, including failures to screen invitees.”

There was no reaction from Indian officials to the report, given its sensitive nature. In New Delhi, government officials declined to comment.

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) had “informatio­n that suggested that Mr Atwal was going with the Prime Minister on the official trip to India” but “did not validate it”, and the agency recognises it had “erred” in not providing informatio­n about Atwal’s history of violent acts to the Prime Minister’s Protective Detail, the report said.

While Jean briefed the media out of a concern “that foreign actors were underminin­g the reputation of respected public institutio­ns,” he “did not notify any senior official from the RCMP, CSIS (Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service) or Global Affairs Canada that he intended to brief journalist­s, and each of them denied that they had concerns about reputation­al damage at that time or thereafter”, the report said. The committee that prepared the report consists of members from the two chambers of Parliament, the House of Commons and the Senate.

REVELATION IS AMONG THE HIGHLIGHTS OF A REPORT PREPARED BY A COMMITTEE AND TABLED IN CANADA’S PARLIAMENT ON TWO DAYS BACK

 ??  ?? Jaspal Atwal
Jaspal Atwal

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