Canada expels Indian diplomat over killing of Sikh activist

Justin Trudeau said he had raised India’s involvement in the shooting directly with Narendra Modi at the G20 summit.

OTTAWA, Sept 19 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Canada ordered an Indian diplomat leave the country as it investigates the killing of a prominent Canadian Sikh leader who was shot in British Columbia in June.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said that an investigation into “credible allegations” that Indian state actors could be behind the death of Hardeep Singh Nijjar was ongoing.

Ottowa’s Foreign Minister Melanie Joly said: “If proven true this would be a great violation of our sovereignty and of the most basic rule of how countries deal with each other.”

“As a consequence we have expelled a top Indian diplomat,” Joy said without stating exactly whom.

Canada is home to hundreds of thousands of people of Indian origin, many of whom are Sikhs.

Indian Prime Minister Modi has expressed “strong concerns” over Canada’s handling of the Punjabi independence movement among the overseas diaspora last week during a meeting with Trudeau at the G20 summit, according to a statement released by India’s Ministry of External Affairs.

The statement described the Sikh movement as “promoting secessionism and inciting violence” against Indian diplomats.

It called on Canada to work with India on what New Delhi said is a threat to the Canadian Indian diaspora. 

Hardeep Singh Nijjar was shot on the premises of a Sikh temple in Surrey, British Columbia, in June of this year, angering the Sikh community in Canada and elsewhere.

Nijjar was declared a terrorist by the Indian government a few years ago because of his activism for a separate homeland for Sikhs in the Punjab region of India.

The fight for a separate Sikh state or the “Khalistan” movement has its roots in the Indian independence movement and the partition of the Indian subcontinent along religious lines.

The 1947 partition sent Muslims to the newly created Pakistan and Hindus and Sikhs to India. Punjab province, which was divided between India and Pakistan, saw deadly violence.

The Khalistan movement was crushed by the Indian government in the years that followed, especially in the 1980s. The decade saw violent anti-Sikh riots that killed thousands, and the movement was banned, with Indian officials citing it as a security threat.

The Indian government had put Nijjar on a wanted list and accused him of being actively involved in the networking and training of the separatist group he headed.

Many in Canada and elsewhere alleged that the Indian government was behind the death of Nijjar. Trudeau said intelligence agencies were looking into those allegations.

“Over the past number of weeks Canadian security agencies have been actively pursuing credible allegations of a potential link between agents of the government of India and the killing of a Canadian citizen, Hardeep Singh Nijjar,” Trudeau said.

Trudeau added that he brought up the slaying with Modi at the G20 summit. Trudeau said he told Modi that any Indian government involvement would be unacceptable and that he asked for cooperation in the investigation. — NNN-AGENCIES

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