Murder of a Sikh leader in Canada | RCMP arrest suspects

(Ottawa) Suspects have been arrested on Canadian soil in connection with the murder of Sikh community leader Hardeep Singh Nijjar – a significant development in a case that has sparked a diplomatic crisis between Canada and India.




The federal Minister of Public Safety, Dominic LeBlanc, indirectly confirmed the arrests made by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) in British Columbia, which were first reported by the CBC network on Friday.

PHOTO SEAN KILPATRICK, THE CANADIAN PRESS

Federal Minister of Public Safety, Dominic LeBlanc

“It is good news that the RCMP is doing its job in a robust manner, in an appropriate manner,” he indicated at a press briefing to comment on the tabling of the interim report on foreign interference in the Canadian elections.

However, he did not want to comment on the matter in detail, relying on the RCMP. “You will understand that the developments concerning the murder of a Canadian citizen, Mr. Nijjar, are part of a police operation which is still ongoing,” he said.

Representatives of the federal police will hold a press conference Friday afternoon in Surrey.

It was in this British Columbia city that the leader of a Sikh temple, Hardeep Singh Nijjar, was shot and killed last June in front of his gurdwara. He was reportedly the subject of death threats because of his support for an independent Sikh state in Khalistan, India.

PHOTO JENNIFER GAUTHIER, REUTERS

The temple run by Hardeep Singh Nijjar.

The affair took on an international dimension last September when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stood up in the House of Commons and pointed the finger at New Delhi.

“In recent weeks, Canadian security agencies have actively investigated credible allegations that there is a possible link between agents of the Government of India and the murder of a Canadian citizen, Hardeep Singh Nijjar,” he then declared.

The Indian government had vigorously denied the allegations, calling them “absurd”.

Retaliatory measures followed: New Delhi freezing processing of Canadian citizens’ visa applications, warning Indian travelers to exercise caution in Canada due to “increasing anti-Indian activities”, expulsion of Canadian diplomats stationed in India.

Concerned about their relationship with the Indian giant, several of Canada’s allies have remained discreet, avoiding attacking the government of Narendra Modi too harshly. An indictment filed in the United States, however, gave weight to the statements of Justin Trudeau and members of his government.

Even recently, the Indian government criticized the Canadian Prime Minister. The Department of Foreign Affairs summoned Canada’s deputy high commissioner to India to discuss Justin Trudeau’s presence at a Sikh celebration where pro-Khalistan slogans were heard.

“The Government of India has expressed its deep concern and strong protests […] This once again illustrates the political space given to separatism, extremism and violence in Canada,” reads a short statement published on the Indian ministry’s website.

Prime Minister Trudeau was not the only federal leader at the Khalsa party last Sunday in Toronto. The leader of the Conservative Party Pierre Poilievre as well as the New Democratic leader Jagmeet Singh, who is of Sikh faith, were also there.


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