The National - News

INDIAN POLITICIAN­S GIVE JUSTIN TRUDEAU THE COLD SHOULDER ON HIS STATE VISIT

▶ Narendra Modi believes Canada’s PM is pandering to Sikhs who want a separate homeland

- SAMANTH SUBRAMANIA­N Chennai

Midway through a week-long state visit to India, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is facing an unusually cool reception from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government.

Mr Trudeau, who landed with his family in New Delhi on Saturday, has travelled to Mumbai, to Agra to see the Taj Mahal and to Ahmedabad, a city in Mr Modi’s home state of Gujarat. But his sole interactio­n with the host prime minister is limited to a planned half day of talks tomorrow.

From Mr Modi, this amounts to a cold shoulder. The Indian prime minister has been known to break protocol and greet leaders at the airport as they land, enveloping them in his trademark bear hug.

He always sends out messages of welcome to visiting dignitarie­s on Twitter and has frequently accompanie­d them on their trips to Gujarat.

No senior government minister has made time to meet with Mr Trudeau. The chief ministers of Gujarat and Uttar Pradesh, where Mr Trudeau travelled, have not met the Canadian delegation either.

Analysts see the treatment of Mr Trudeau as a diplomatic snub – a signal that India is unhappy with the young prime minister’s tendency to pander to Canadian Sikhs, who want an independen­t Sikh state to be establishe­d in India.

Unidentifi­ed sources in the Indian government insisted that no snub was intended. But Mr Trudeau was forced to respond yesterday to questions about India’s reception, denying that he felt slighted or snubbed.

His government, he said on Monday, had been “unequivoca­l on our policy of one united India”.

Mr Trudeau is also facing heat at home. The Canadian Taxpayers Federation, a non-profit in Ottawa, said in a statement that “the proportion of time being spent actually meeting foreign counterpar­ts on this trip does not suggest a good use of public money”.

The Sikh separatist movement to create a nation called Khalistan around the state of Punjab began in the early 1970s.

At its peak, through the next two decades, it staged an armed insurgency that was put down, often violently, by the Indian state. In retaliatio­n, prime minister Indira Gandhi was assassinat­ed in 1984 by her two Sikh bodyguards. The movement found support and financial backing from the many Sikhs who had emigrated to Canada. At least half a million Sikhs live in Canada, a large proportion of them in the metropolit­an regions of Toronto and Vancouver.

A pro-Khalistan group with members in Canada was responsibl­e for the mid-air bombing of an Air India plane flying from Montreal to London, en route to Mumbai.

In India, as the government crackdown continued, Sikh extremism dwindled dramatical­ly after the 1990s. But a concern about the movement’s revival “cannot be downplayed”, said Pranay Kotasthane, who heads the geostrateg­y programme at the Takshashil­a Institutio­n, a think tank in Bengaluru.

In December, the Indian government revealed to parliament that Pakistani intelligen­ce operatives were “making efforts towards moral and financial support to proKhalist­an elements for anti-India activities and to revive militancy in Punjab”.

In the US and in Canada, proKhalist­an groups openly call for a referendum in Punjab, to vote for or against a Sikh nation.

“What started as a diaspora extremist and terrorist movement has now gained support in the realm of politics as well,” Mr Kotasthane said. “Understand­ably, India is concerned.”

In trying to engage with Sikh communitie­s and gain their votes, Mr Trudeau has trod lightly on the issue of Khalistani separatism, said Vivek Dehejia, a professor of economics at Carleton University in Ottawa.

The Trudeau cabinet has four Sikh ministers, one of whom was accused by the Punjab chief minister last year of having Khalistani sympathies.

“More disturbing­ly, Mr Trudeau attended the Khalsa Day parade [organised by Sikh religious groups] a couple of months ago”, Mr Dehejia said. “This was a parade where there were pro-Khalistan banners and banners honouring the martyrs of the movement.”

The Ontario Sikhs and Gurdwara Council, which organises the parade every year, did not respond to requests for comment. Mukhbir Singh, president of the World Sikh Organisati­on, said in a statement: “There is nothing to indicate any rise in radicalism.

“Peacefully advocating for political causes cannot be confused with or tarnished as radicalism. These bizarre allegation­s made against Canadian Sikhs are incredibly damaging and result in actual harm against the community.”

Although Mr Kotasthane saw India’s reasons for concern with Khalistan, he disagreed with its diplomatic stance towards Mr Trudeau.

“Surely India has many more matters of national interest to be discussed with Canada apart from the Khalistan issue alone,” he said.

“Giving a cold shoulder to a head of state on a planned visit doesn’t seem to be the best way to address India’s concerns related to Khalistani networks in Canada. This is unlikely to make Canada alter its stance.”

 ?? Reuters ?? The Canadian Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, his wife, Sophie Gregoire, daughter Ella Grace and son Xavier during their visit to the Golden temple in Amritsar
Reuters The Canadian Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, his wife, Sophie Gregoire, daughter Ella Grace and son Xavier during their visit to the Golden temple in Amritsar

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