Medicine Hat News

Atwal, PMO clash over event invitation

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SURREY, B.C. A man convicted of attempted murder who was invited to a dinner reception with Justin Trudeau in India says he has a friendly relationsh­ip with the prime minister, and stayed away to save him from further embarrassm­ent.

But the Prime Minister’s Office says there is no merit to the assertions by Jaspal Atwal, who was convicted of attempted murder in the 1980s, especially the claim that he and Trudeau were friends.

The dispute emerges after Atwal was interviewe­d by the The Canadian Press at his home in Surrey, B.C., following Trudeau’s, at times, turbulent trip to India, which ended with his return to Ottawa on Sunday.

Atwal says he received an invitation directly from the Canadian high commission­er’s office for the event in New Delhi last week.

British Columbia Liberal MP Randeep Sarai has said in a statement it was his choice alone to include Atwal on the guest list and he realized afterwards that he exercised poor judgement in doing so. On Sunday, a senior government official said, on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivit­y of the situation, that the high commission invited some guests after receiving recommenda­tions from others, including MPs such as Sarai.

Atwal said he has known Trudeau for years. During one of Trudeau’s visits to B.C. in 2008 or 2009, he said the pair sat together in Atwal’s Hummer and chatted.

“We know each other. He knows my name, he’ll come and say, ‘Hey Jas, how you doing?’ We have a good relationsh­ip I never see any problem,” he said in the interview on Saturday. “But now he says, ‘Oh Jaspal’s not supposed to be here, this and that.’ It surprised me.”

Trudeau's spokesman, Cameron Ahmad, said the prime minister and Atwal are not friends.

“That is not true,” Ahmad said in an interview. Asked about the Humvee conversati­on, Ahmad said: “I don’t know what he’s referring to there, but no, they are not (friends).”

Atwal said he is not a member of the Liberal party and has helped politician­s from different parties both federally and provincial­ly.

He said he was travelling in India last week on a personal trip and questioned why Sarai is taking the blame alone for his invitation to the reception.

“I don’t know why he’s taking all the responsibi­lity; he had nothing to do with that,” he said. ”The high commission­er, they’re the one giving the invitation. Everyone’s name goes through CSIS and the RCMP.”

But Ahmad disputed Atwal’s version of events, reiteratin­g the statement that Sarai released last week.

“I would refer to what the prime minister said when he addressed these matters in India on two occasions,” said Ahmad.

“It is not true, these claims that come from Mr. Atwal.”

Atwal was convicted of attempting to kill Indian cabinet minister Malkiat Singh Sidhu during a visit to Vancouver Island in 1986.

In spite of media reports, he said he was not a member of the Internatio­nal Sikh Youth Federation, a banned terrorist group in Canada and India, at the time.

He was also charged, but not convicted, in connection with a 1985 attack on Ujjal Dosanjh, a staunch opponent of the Sikh separatist movement, who later became B.C. premier and a federal Liberal cabinet minister.

Atwal said he does not support Khalistani organizati­ons and warns Sikh youth in B.C. against believing propaganda from separatist­s, many of whom he believes have a financial interest in the cause.

He confirmed he was blackliste­d from visiting India because of his crime. But he said any suggestion the government of India intervened, either by getting him an invitation or removing him from the blacklist so that he could attend, is a “total lie.”

“India’s government has nothing to do with anything,” Atwal said.

Ahmad said the Prime Minister’s Office has no comment on Indian policies regarding visas or blacklists.

Atwal’s passport shows stamps from two other recent visits to the country in January and August 2017. He said he also visited in 1999 to spread his father’s ashes and in 2002 to go shopping for his son’s wedding.

He showed his passport and the invitation­s from the high commission to the events in India to The Canadian Press.

After his visa expired in 2007, Atwal said he applied to have it renewed but was unsuccessf­ul until his 2017 visits.

A government official, discussing the matter on condition of anonymity, has said guest lists for receptions such as those in India are not vetted individual­ly for security. Those who issue the invites are expected to do their own due diligence to ensure their own guests are safe, the official said.

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Justin Trudeau

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