Pakistan Today (Lahore)

Khalistan Referendum campaign shakes Canadian politics

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After creating strong waves in the United Kingdom in November 2021, the Khalistan Referendum — a community-sponsored plebiscite of an internatio­nal advocacy group, Sikhs For Justice (SFJ) — is now rocking Canadian politics where the voting is going to start on September 18.

Khalistan Referendum campaign — in which Sikhs are asked to answer the question “Should Indian governed Punjab be an independen­t country?” — has drawn fierce opposition from New Delhi, Indian media and pro-india segments of Non-resident Indians (NRIS).

While Indian media and NRIS have been voicing their opposition, the Indian government has been pro-actively labelling and equating the unofficial referendum on Khalistan as “terrorism” and has declared SFJ — the proponent of the referendum — as an illegal organisati­on under the controvers­ial Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA) of India.

Khalistan mega billboards are being put up across Canada ahead of voting on September 18. — Photo by autho

Ahead of September 18, Khalistan Referendum voting in Toronto, pro-khalistan activists are actively holding truck rallies with Khalistan banners, plastering mega billboards, signs and distributi­ng the promotiona­l material at Gurdwaras in Brampton — the heavily Sikh town around Greater Toronto Area. The voting will take place in the government-owned and operated facility The Gore Meadow Community Centre, Brampton.

Just as it happened in the UK, Khalistan Referendum activities in Canada have similarly irked the pro-india factions in Canada who, following the Indian government’s stance, are labelling the referendum as antiindia terrorism and wish a ban on Sikh secessioni­st activities from Canadian soil, despite the fact that Canadian Charter of Freedoms and Rights protects the non-violent expression of all political opinions including seeking secession through a referendum.

So far, the voting in Khalistan Referendum which started on October 31, 2021 from London, UK, has taken place in several towns across UK, Switzerlan­d and Italy and approximat­ely 450,000 Sikhs have cast their votes.

The Punjab Referendum Commission (PRC), a panel of non-aligned experts on referendum­s and direct democracy, is supervisin­g the voting procedure to ensure transparen­cy and compliance with internatio­nal standards of balloting.

The September 18 voting centre for Khalistan Referendum in Toronto, Canada is named after Shaheed Harjinder Singh Parha to honour the young pro-khalistan Sikh who went back to India from Canada to participat­e in the then ongoing armed struggle for

Khalistan in the wake of the Indian Army’s June 1984 attack on the Golden Temple. In a staged police encounter, Indian forces extra-judicially killed Parha in 1988.

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