ISI using pro-Khalistan elements against India: Canadian report
BHAGAT SINGH BRAR AND PARVKAR SINGH DULAI ARE IN THE NO-FLY LIST CANADA FOR FACILITATING TERROR
TORONTO: A case relating to two Canadian Sikhs being placed on a no-fly list in the country has been linked to an alleged Pakistan-based plot to use pro-Khalistan elements to conduct terror acts in India, according to a report.
The details emerged as two men — Bhagat Singh Brar and his business partner Parvkar Singh Dulai — challenged being blocked from travelling by air. According to the report from Stewart Bell in the Canadian outlet Global News, Brar was “promoting extremism, including the radicalisation of youth, with the aim of achieving Khalistan independence; and attack planning and facilitation, including weapons procurement, to conduct attacks in
India,” as per supporting case documents filed by Canadian security agencies, including Public Safety Canada, Royal Canadian Mounted Police and Canadian Security Intelligence Service.
Dulai was described as a “facilitator of terrorist-related activities and has shown an ongoing pattern of involvement within the Khalistani extremist milieu”.
The report said Brar visited Pakistan in 2015 and collaborated with one Gurjeet Singh Cheema to plan an attack in India. These documents alleged that Brar collected donations for gurdwaras and “is suspected to have been diverting major part of the funds for anti-India activities”.
He was also linked to Pakistan’s
intelligence service, ISI. Dulai has been described as a very vocal supporter of Khalistan.
Brar again visited Pakistan in 2018 to meet his father who happens to be Lakhbir Singh Rode, nephew of Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale and founder of the banned International Sikh Youth Federation.
To be clear, none of these allegations have been proven in any court nor have either Brar or Dulai been charged with terrorism. Both have also denied the allegations contained in the Canadian security documents in filings made by their lawyers in this case.
Shuvaloy Majumdar, a senior fellow with the Ottawa-based Macdonald-Laurier Institute, said that Bell’s article exposed the “depth” of how Pakistan’s intelligence operations position themselves as community brokers.
“This is a national security story impacting not one but two democracies, and has to be taken seriously as any other state sponsorship of terrorism.”