Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Indian consulate officials to hold camp in Canadian gurdwara

- Anirudh Bhattachar­yya letters@hindustant­imes.com

WHAT MAKES THE EVENT SIGNIFICAN­T IS THAT THE LOCATION IS IN A TOWNSHIP CONSIDERED THE FOCAL POINT OF PROKHALIST­AN ELEMENTS IN PROVINCE

Some four months after several gurdwara management­s in the Canadian province of Ontario banned Indian officials from their premises, that controvers­ial move appears to be losing traction. In an apparent symbolic gesture, officials of the Indian Consulate in Toronto will be holding a camp at the Nanaksar Gurdwara in the Brampton, a suburb of Toronto, next weekend.

What makes this event more significan­t is that the location is in a township that is considered the focal point of pro-Khalistan elements in the province, if not the country.

Announcing the camp, India’s Consul General in Toronto Dinesh Bhatia tweeted it is part of “continuous efforts by the Consulate General of India...to reach out to the Indian and Indo-Canadian community and provide best consular services.”

Three or four officials from the Consulate will be present at the gurdwara for “consultati­on and advice on issues pertaining to various consular matters” like those related to passports, visas and Overseas Citizen of India credential­s faced by Indian diaspora, an official release from the Consulate stated.

This isn’t the first time they have been present at a gurdwara in the province in their official capacity since the boycott announceme­nt at the end of last year. Last month, Bhatia also visited the Sikh Heritage Centre Gurdwara, also in Brampton, on the occasion of Baisakhi.

Such camps were held regularly in recent years: In November 2017, for instance, they were organised at the Dashmesh Darbar in Brampton and Gurdwara Sahib in the town of Waterloo.

Next week will mark the first time Indian officials will make their presence felt after the lateDecemb­er ban decision, an action that began in Ontario and then rapidly spread through other provinces of Canada and the US, UK and Australia.

An open house of this nature is held to resolve issues faced by members of the community promptly and helps with the Indian government’s outreach effort. “Many of the gurdwaras are willing to work with us,” an Indian official said. It also highlights the divide within the management­s of gurdwaras with several having objected to the ban decision soon after it was announced, including some in formal letters to the Consul General disavowing the measure.

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