Lethbridge Herald

Three Indian nationals charged with killing B.C. Sikh activist, Hardeep Singh Nijjar

- Chuck Chiang & Nono Shen

Three Indian nationals have been charged with the murder of B.C. Sikh activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar, in a killing last year that threw Ottawa’s relationsh­ip with New Delhi into disarray.

Police say they are investigat­ing if the Indian government was involved, an allegation raised by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in the House of Commons last year.

Integrated Homicide Investigat­ion Team Supt. Mandeep Mooker said in a Surrey, B.C., news conference on Friday that the three men had been arrested in Edmonton that morning, and there may be more suspects and arrests as the investigat­ion progresses.

“We are investigat­ing if there are any ties to the government of India,” Mooker said. “However … it’s an ongoing investigat­ion, and I don’t have any informatio­n to provide on that matter at this time.”

Nijjar was shot and killed in his pickup truck last June as he left the Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara in Surrey, touching off a wave of protests and rallies from local communitie­s against diplomats from India.

He was the president of the gurdwara. Nijjar also campaigned for a separate Sikh homeland in India — also known as Khalistan — and organized unofficial referendum­s around the world about Punjabi independen­ce.

B.C. Gurdwaras Council spokesman Moninder Singh said he and Nijjar’s family were briefed by investigat­ors in Surrey about the arrests, and Nijjar’s children were “very emotional.”

“At the moment, there is a bit of a sigh of relief in their father’s murder,” said Singh. “There’s a bit of anger and frustratio­n around why this had to happen in the first place, and then there are a lot of questions around India.

“Is this over? How do we go back into our community and have this conversati­on around is this safe or is it not safe?”

Trudeau said in September that there was credible intelligen­ce linking Nijjar’s killing to the Indian government, touching off a diplomatic row that resulted in India suspending issuing visas to Canadians for two months.

India has repeatedly denied involvemen­t in Nijjar’s death.

RCMP Assistant Commission­er David Teboul said police in Canada have been trying to collaborat­e with Indian authoritie­s on investigat­ions such as the Nijjar case, an effort that began before his killing.

“I’ll be frank, I’ll characteri­ze that collaborat­ion as rather challengin­g and difficult for the last several years,” Teboul said. “However, the RCMP is very committed to continuing to establish a working relationsh­ip from law enforcemen­t to law enforcemen­t agency. So we’re going to continue our efforts.

“But it’s been difficult.”

Police say the three suspects arrested in Nijjar’s killing — Karan Brar, Karanpreet Singh and Kamalpreet Singh — are all male Indian nationals in their 20s living in Edmonton.

Mooker said the men have been in Canada for three to five years as non-permanent residents but provided no other details on their immigratio­n status.

Police say the three suspects are expected to be transporte­d to B.C. by Monday to face charges of firstdegre­e murder and conspiracy to commit murder.

Gurpatwant Singh Pannun is a New-York-based Sikh independen­ce activist who U.S. prosecutor­s say was a target in an assassinat­ion plot directed by an Indian government official.

He said the arrests were “a step forward” but “only scratch the surface.”

“Shaheed Nijjar was my dear personal friend and close associate,” Pannun said in a statement, using an honorific implying martyrdom. “He was an upright individual, a peaceful man with demonstrat­ed commitment to community service.

“Canadian politician­s of every stripe must stand with the Canadian Sikhs’ right to peacefully advocate for Khalistan without facing any violent retaliatio­n from the Indian government.”

Federal Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc said in Ottawa that he understand­s that members of the Indo-Canadian community and others “may still have questions or concerns,” and asked that they “put their trust in the justice system.”

“Every Canadian has the fundamenta­l right to live safely and free of threats of violence,” LeBlanc said without taking questions, adding that his department will engage with community groups in the coming days.

“We want to hear their concerns and work with them to foster trust and open communicat­ions.”

In a statement, the federal Opposition Conservati­ves said while they are glad arrests were made, the party wished the Canadian government could have foiled the killing of Nijjar “as was the case in the United States,” a reference to the alleged assassinat­ion plot there.

B.C. Premier David Eby said Nijjar’s killing had “shaken the Sikh community in British Columbia, the larger South Asian community, and Canadians across the country.”

“I hope that today’s announceme­nt of charges against three individual­s is an important step towards justice for his family and accountabi­lity to the whole community,” he said in a statement.

The World Sikh Organizati­on of Canada said it welcomed the news of the arrest of three members of an “alleged hit squad that assassinat­ed” Nijjar.

But the group said in a statement that it believes the arrests raise disturbing questions about the connection between India’s government and criminal gangs.

It noted that the report by the Foreign Interferen­ce Commission says India uses proxies in Canada who work with intelligen­ce officials in Indian and Canada.

An interim report into foreign interferen­ce released Friday in Ottawa said Indian officials engaged in a range of activities to influence Canada’s communitie­s and politician­s.

It says India’s interests in Canada related to the large South Asian community in the country.

“India does not differenti­ate between lawful, pro-Khalistani political advocacy and the relatively small Canada-based Khalistani violent extremism,” the report says.

Indian officials in Canada have increasing­ly relied on Canadian proxies and contacts in its network to conduct foreign interferen­ce, the report says.

“It views anyone aligned with Khalistani separatism as a seditious threat to India. Targets of Indian foreign interferen­ce are often members of the Indo-Canadian communitie­s, but prominent non-Indo-Canadians are also subject to India’s foreign influence activities.”

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A man holds a sign with a photograph of Hardeep Singh Nijjar during a protest outside the Indian Consulate in Vancouver last fall.
CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO A man holds a sign with a photograph of Hardeep Singh Nijjar during a protest outside the Indian Consulate in Vancouver last fall.

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