Ottawa Citizen

Sophie Trudeau in photo with former Sikh terrorist

Concerns over delegation vetting process

- Kim bolan

VANCOUVER • A Surrey, B.C., businessma­n convicted in a 1986 terrorist shooting posed with a Canadian cabinet minister and Sophie Grégoire-Trudeau during the prime minister’s trip to India.

Jaspal Atwal, a one-time member of the now-banned Internatio­nal Sikh Youth Federation, had also been invited to a dinner with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at the Canadian High Commission in Delhi on Thursday night.

But Atwal told Postmedia that he does not plan to attend as he is in Mumbai on business.

Atwal said in a series of text messages Wednesday that he was in India for Media Waves, a Surrey online radio station. He referred Postmedia to a representa­tive of the radio station who did not return phone calls.

Atwal also suggested it was unfair to raise his criminal conviction for shooting a visiting Punjabi cabinet minister on Vancouver Island in 1986 given how long ago the crime occurred.

He blamed enemies for circulatin­g the photos obtained by Postmedia and stressed that he travelled to India on his own on Feb. 11 and is not part of any official government delegation.

At the time of the 1986 shooting, Atwal was a Sikh separatist active in the proKhalist­an Internatio­nal Sikh Youth Federation. He and three others were convicted in 1987 of trying to kill Malkiat Singh Sidhu on an isolated road near Gold River. The Punjab cabinet minister was visiting B.C. for his nephew’s wedding.

Sidhu was struck twice and survived the attempt on his life, but was later assassinat­ed in India. The trial judge called the attack “an act of terrorism” and sentenced Atwal and the others to 20 years. Atwal later admitted to the parole board that he was the shooter that day.

Some Indian officials, including Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh, have been critical of the Canadian government for being soft on Khalistani supporters living in Canada. Singh met Wednesday with Trudeau and Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan.

After the meeting, Trudeau expressed Canada’s support for a united India and Singh posted on his Facebook page that he “was happy to receive categorica­l assurance from (Trudeau) that his country does not support any separatist movement.”

“His words are a big relief to all of us here in India and we look forward to his government’s support in tackling fringe separatist elements,” Singh said.

Nobody from the Canadian government responded to requests for informatio­n Wednesday about how someone with Atwal’s criminal history could be cleared to attend official events in India.

Former Liberal cabinet minister and B.C. premier Ujjal Dosanjh said the government should have done its due diligence in looking into Atwal’s history especially when Indian Prime Minister Narender Modi had already spoken to Trudeau about his concerns over Canadian Khalistani­s.

“They still didn’t vet everybody properly and they allowed a former violent Khalistani access to the delegation,” Dosanjh said. “With that level of awareness, this happening is an indication that they weren’t all that careful.”

 ?? AFP PHOTO/DPRO ?? Justin Trudeau meets with Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh in Amritsar this week. Both later seemed to indicate their meeting was a reset on the relationsh­ip that can now turn to fostering economic and cultural ties.
AFP PHOTO/DPRO Justin Trudeau meets with Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh in Amritsar this week. Both later seemed to indicate their meeting was a reset on the relationsh­ip that can now turn to fostering economic and cultural ties.
 ??  ?? Sophie Grégoire-Trudeau and Jaspal Atwal, convicted in a 1986 shooting, are photograph­ed together during the PM’s India trip.
Sophie Grégoire-Trudeau and Jaspal Atwal, convicted in a 1986 shooting, are photograph­ed together during the PM’s India trip.

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