Times Colonist

India a key source of foreign interferen­ce in Canada, says national security adviser

- DYLAN ROBERTSON

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s national security adviser says India is among the top sources of foreign interferen­ce in Canada, a public designatio­n Ottawa has largely limited to authoritar­ian states.

“When I talk about foreign interferen­ce and economic security, I’m now talking about a number of state actors and nonstate proxies,” Jody Thomas said last Friday.

“This includes Russia, Iran, India. That said, the actor that comes up most on these issues, and it’s no surprise to anybody, is China.”

Thomas’s remarks, at a conference held by the Canadian Global Affairs Institute, come months after the Liberals highlighte­d India as part of their Indo-Pacific strategy and as a priority for establishi­ng closer economic and scientific ties.

India’s high commission in Ottawa has not responded to a request for comment.

On occasion India has argued that elements in Canada are behind interferen­ce in Indian domestic affairs, particular­ly a separatist movement led by some Sikhs that at times has involved violence. That includes the 1985 bombing of an Air India flight from Toronto to New Delhi.

University of British Columbia professor Vina Nadjibulla said it was “striking” Thomas listed India along with the three other countries, and she noted that these concerns pose a challenge to Canada forming closer ties with India.

“That obviously has to do with our diaspora communitie­s and the politics there,” Nadjibulla said during another part of the conference.

“The relationsh­ip we have diplomatic­ally with India is improving rapidly, but I think we would be kidding ourselves if we were not to acknowledg­e some of the diaspora politics and local issues here in Canada, which will have a significan­t impact.”

Federal agencies have indirectly warned in recent years of India exerting improper influence in Canada, but rarely by name and almost always in internal documents.

Records disclosed through the Access to Informatio­n Act last year cited the potential for foreign interferen­ce stemming from Indian students’ concerns that Canada was slow to grant required study permits. The heavily redacted records noted social media was an active component of these student activist campaigns.

A 2018 report obtained by the Canadian Press warned that IndoCanadi­ans

and Chinese-Canadians were among diaspora groups facing “the risk of these communitie­s being influenced, overtly or covertly, by foreign government­s with their own agendas.”

The report was prepared for deputy ministers attending a retreat on national security. “The lines between legitimate advocacy and lobbying and pressures imposed to advance the economic and political interests of foreign actors are becoming increasing­ly blurred,” it said.

That same year, Thomas’s predecesso­r Daniel Jean suggested rogue elements in the Indian government sought to embarrass Trudeau during his 2018 visit.

Jaspal Atwal — a man with a serious criminal record and a history of violence — was invited to two events with Trudeau during his trip to India, and a report from the national security committee of parliament­arians found the RCMP failed to alert Trudeau’s protective detail of that risk.

The report starts off exploring whether foreign interferen­ce played into the incident, but the public version of the report does not include informatio­n related to that. The report also lists the multiple times India had raised Sikh extremism with Canadian authoritie­s, and how Ottawa had responded to that concern.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada