
Trudeau is singularly responsible for blowing up ties with India—not just through the fantastic allegations but by also turning Canada into a global hub for the Khalistani extremism that fans Sikh separatism and foments terrorism within India. – Sreemoy Talukdar
The Canada-India episode is a recurrent nightmare that refuses to go away. With the mega crisis in West Asia demanding global attention, the daily headlines momentarily went under the radar. In no way did it mean that the issue was resolved, or that the two nations were inching towards a compact or even looking to arrest the escalation.
Canada and India are steadily adopting more intractable positions, and the simmering tension is now a boiling cauldron. Repercussions of this diplomatic spat could take years to subside and may leave a lasting impact.
Canada, of course, bears the lion’s share of the blame for pushing the relationship to this precipice. Not only did Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau level serious allegations against India without bothering to share any evidence, subsequent steps taken by the Trudeau regime cemented the impression that a reckless punter is calling the shots at the risk of permanently damaging bilateral ties.
Nothing about Canada’s actions makes any sense. To accuse India of carrying out an extra-judicial killing of a Canadian citizen is a seismic allegation that requires irrefutable evidence. That Trudeau did it based on “credible allegations of a potential link” resembles a pantomime, made even more ridiculous by the fact that Ottawa has steadfastly refused to share any specific information or facts. On one hand, Trudeau speaks of “privately engaging with India”, talks about not willing to escalate, on the other hand, he makes frantic calls to world leaders to complain about India.
Canada let the deadline for withdrawal of its diplomats wilfully pass, and then accused India publicly of “violating international laws” when New Delhi threatened to take countermeasures. The very Vienna Convention that Canada evoked to accuse India of “violating basic principle of diplomacy”, ironically bears out India’s positions as the one in compliance with the international law.
It is Canada that has consistently failed to provide safety and security for Indian diplomats, it is Canada that has been interfering in India’s internal affairs while feigning outrage, and it is Canada that provides a safe haven for anti-India malcontents who are inciting political violence within India’s borders and plotting to balkanize the country. No sovereign nation would tolerate such malfeasance, let alone Canada that under Pierre Trudeau, Justin’s father, ran a secret intelligence unit to quell the Quebec separatist movement.
Filed under: canada, india | Tagged: diplomatic row, hardeep singh nijjar, india-canada relations, justin trudeau, khalistani separatists | 1 Comment »






















