Canada’s Murder Claim Against India: What We Know

Canada’s Murder Claim Against India: What We Know


On Monday, Prime Minister Justin‌ Trudeau ‍of ​Canada ​made the shocking ⁣accusation that ‌government agents from India had been⁤ involved in​ the killing of a Sikh community leader in ⁤British Columbia in ⁢June.

The allegations have widened a growing⁤ rift between Canada and India and set off⁣ a political dispute ⁤between the two already apprehensive nations.

Here is what we know:

Hardeep Singh Nijjar, 45, ⁢was born in ‍the North Indian state of‍ Punjab. After several unsuccessful attempts‌ to gain entry to ‌Canada, he moved there​ in the mid-1990s, according to ​Indian news reports, just‌ after a period of Indian government crackdowns​ on a Sikh separatist movement.

In Canada, Mr. Nijjar worked as a plumber, got married and had two sons. ‌He obtained his Canadian ⁤citizenship in‌ 2015,⁢ according to Canada’s ‍immigration ⁣minister, Marc Miller, in a post on X, ‍formerly called Twitter. In 2020, Mr. Nijjar became the president​ of a Sikh temple in Surrey, British Columbia, the Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara.

Mr. Nijjar⁤ was a ⁤self-proclaimed “Sikh nationalist who believes in and supports Sikhs’ right to self-determination and independence ‍of‌ Indian-occupied Punjab through a future referendum,” according to⁣ an open letter he wrote to the Canadian government in 2016. He had been a key ‌figure‍ in ‍British Columbia rallying‍ votes for a referendum⁣ in Canada supporting the establishment of a nation called Khalistan from part of Punjab State.

The Indian government⁤ declared Mr. Nijjar a terrorist in 2020, decades after he left India. It​ accused him of plotting a violent‍ attack in India and⁣ leading a terrorist group called the⁣ Khalistan Tiger Force. In Punjab, ​however, politicians⁢ and journalists‍ asserted that despite such charges against him, ⁣many locals had never heard of him⁣ or ⁣his movement.

Mr. Nijjar was ‍shot in June⁣ near the⁣ Sikh temple ⁤that⁢ he led. While investigators from ⁣the Royal Canadian Mounted ⁤Police‍ later said‌ he ‌had been ambushed by​ masked men, they did not disclose if the attack ⁤had been politically motivated.

On‍ Monday, ⁣the Canadian ⁣prime minister told lawmakers that “agents of the government of India” ‌had been linked to Mr.‍ Nijjar’s killing on Canadian soil.

Evidence of the ⁤ambush was based on intelligence gathered ⁣by the Canadian ⁣government,⁤ according to Mr. Trudeau, who added that he had raised this issue directly ‍with Prime Minister Narendra Modi of⁢ India “in no uncertain terms” at the‍ Group of 20 summit this month in ‍New Delhi.

“Any involvement of a‌ foreign government in the ‌killing of a Canadian citizen on Canadian soil ⁣is an unacceptable violation of our ‍sovereignty,” ‌Mr. Trudeau said on Monday, adding that ‌Canada⁢ would ‍pressure India to cooperate with investigations‌ into ​Mr. Nijjar’s death.

Canada’s foreign minister, Mélanie Joly, also announced that it had expelled an Indian diplomat, ⁢whom she ‍described as the de facto⁣ head of India’s intelligence agency in Canada.

2023-09-20 ​02:42:44
Post from www.nytimes.com
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