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       Sikh leaders welcome arrests in Canada activist killing, but questions
       loom
        
 (HTM) Source
        
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       **Montreal, Canada -** Sikh leaders in North America have welcomed
       recent arrests in the killing of Canadian Sikh activist Hardeep Singh
       Nijjar, but allegations that the Indian government was involved
       continue to fuel questions and unease.
        
       Canadian police announced late last week that three Indian nationals
       were arrested in Canada for their involvement in the June killing of
       Nijjar, a prominent Sikh community leader in the westernmost province
       of British Columbia.
        
       ## Keep reading
        
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       Police added that their investigation into Nijjar's shooting death
       would continue, including whether "there are any ties to the
       government of India".
        
       Moninder Singh, a spokesman for the BC Gurdwaras Council, a coalition
       of Sikh temples in the province, told Al Jazeera there was "some
       relief" that arrests were made in the case.
        
       But Singh, who knew Nijjar personally, said the question of Indian
       state involvement is "looming" over the Sikh community, which numbers
       about 770,000 people across Canada — the largest Sikh diaspora outside
       India.
        
       "The foreign interference is real. The assassination plot is real,"
       said Singh, adding that it is imperative to get to the bottom of what
       India's role has been.
        
       "All of that has to be exposed," he continued. "There [are] numerous
       reasons why it's very, very important for public safety in Canada,
       along with deterring India from carrying out this kind of operation
       ever again."
        
       ## Canada-India tensions
        
       Tensions between Canada and India skyrocketed in September after
       Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced that authorities were
       investigating "credible allegations of a potential link" between
       Indian government agents and Nijjar's killing.
        
       Nijjar was fatally shot on June 18, 2023, outside the Guru Nanak Sikh
       Gurdwara, a temple in Surrey, British Columbia, where he served as
       president.
        
       India vehemently denied the allegations that it was involved, calling
       them "absurd". It also accused Nijjar of being involved in "terrorism"
       — a claim rejected by his supporters.
        
       Nijjar had been a leading advocate in what is known as the Khalistan
       movement, a Sikh campaign for a sovereign state in India's Punjab
       region.
        
       While largely dormant inside India itself, Sikh separatism is largely
       viewed as a threat by the Indian government, which has urged Western
       nations to crack down on Khalistan movement leaders in the diaspora.
        
       Canada has provided shelter to "Khalistani terrorists and extremists"
       who "continue to threaten India's sovereignty and territorial
       integrity", India's Ministry of External Affairs said as it rejected
       Trudeau's allegations in September.
        
       But Sikh leaders in Canada said they have faced threats for years, and
       they accused the Indian government of trying to silence them.
        
       Nijjar's killing amplified these longstanding tensions, and new
       reports have emerged of Indian officials' involvement in other alleged
       plots to harm prominent Sikh leaders in Canada and the United States.
        
       ## Reports of threats
        
       For instance, in late November, the US Department of Justice announced
       charges against a 52-year-old Indian national, Nikhil Gupta, over a
       foiled attempt to assassinate Sikh American activist Gurpatwant Singh
       Pannun.
        
       The plot to kill Pannun, another Sikh separatist leader, was organised
       in coordination with an Indian government employee and others,
       according to the Justice Department.
        
       Last week, The Washington Post reported that US intelligence agencies
       determined that the operation to target Pannun was approved by the
       then-head of India's foreign intelligence agency, known as the
       Research and Analysis Wing or RAW.
        
       The Indian government rejected those allegations as "unwarranted" and
       "unsubstantiated", according to media reports.
        
       But rights groups have said India "needs to do a lot more than issue
       denials" in such cases.
        
       "India's alleged involvement in assassination plots in the US and
       Canada suggests a new and notorious leap in extrajudicial killings,"
       Elaine Pearson, Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said in December.
        
       Sikh separatist leader Gurpatwant Singh Pannun is pictured in his
       office in New York in November 2023 [Ted Shaffrey/AP Photo]
        
       Pritpal Singh, an activist and founder of the American Sikh Caucus
       Committee, was among the prominent Sikh leaders who were informed of
       threats against them over the past year.
        
       Agents with the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) visited
       Pritpal, who is based in the state of California, in June to warn him.
        
       In a statement to Al Jazeera this week, Pritpal said he commended "the
       unwavering commitment of Canadian and American law enforcement
       agencies" in their investigations into Nijjar's killing and the
       surveillance of Sikhs.
        
       "The alleged involvement of the Indian government in these heinous
       acts is a blatant violation of international norms and human rights.
       It is wholly unacceptable for any government to engage in
       extrajudicial killings and suppress dissenting voices abroad," he
       said.
        
       Pritpal also demanded accountability for threats against Sikh
       activists. "We must insist on US justice against those involved in
       India's alleged murder-for-hire scheme targeting Americans on US
       soil," he said.
        
       "It is imperative that these cases are prosecuted on American soil by
       the United States Department of Justice to prevent these perpetrators
       from self-prosecuting."
        
       ## India hits out at Canada
        
       Still, India has continued to deny any involvement in the alleged
       plots, while blasting Canada over its approach to Nijjar's killing in
       particular.
        
       The Indian High Commission in Ottawa, the Canadian capital, did not
       respond to Al Jazeera's requests for comment on the case.
        
       After news broke on Friday that Canadian authorities had made arrests,
       the Indian external affairs minister, Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, said
       the Canadian government had a "political compulsion" to blame India.
        
       Speaking to Indian news outlet The Economic Times this week,
       Jaishankar also accused Canada of "providing a haven to organised
       crime".
        
       "We've been repeatedly telling the Canadians that, if you actually
       allow such forces to set up shop and create networks, this is going to
       harm their own society. But so far, I don't think that advice has been
       well heeded," the minister said.
        
       Canadian authorities have rejected the idea that they have allowed
       unlawful activity to proliferate. Experts also argue that many of the
       individuals India considers "terrorists" are not violating any
       Canadian laws.
        
       "Canada is a rule-of-law country with a strong and independent justice
       system as well as a fundamental commitment to protecting all its
       citizens," Trudeau said during a Sikh community event in Toronto on
       Saturday.
        
       "I know that many Canadians, particularly members of the Sikh
       community, are feeling uneasy and perhaps even frightened right now.
       Well, every Canadian has the fundamental right to live safely and free
       from discrimination and threats of violence in Canada," Trudeau added.
        
       ## Use of 'proxies'
        
       Last week, the head of a Canadian public inquiry into foreign
       interference also released an interim report that accused Indian
       officials as well as their proxies in Canada of engaging in "a range
       of activities that seek to influence Canadian communities and
       politicians".
        
       This includes efforts to "align Canada's position with India's
       interests on key issues, particularly with respect to how the Indian
       government perceives Canada-based supporters of an independent Sikh
       homeland", Commissioner Marie-Josee Hogue said.
        
       The report noted that India "does not differentiate between lawful,
       pro-Khalistani political advocacy and the relatively small Canada-
       based Khalistani violent extremism".
        
       Therefore, "it views anyone aligned with Khalistani separatism as a
       seditious threat to India".
        
       Hogue also found that Indian officials are increasingly relying on
       Canadian and Canada-based proxies and their contacts to conduct
       foreign interference.
        
       "This obfuscates any explicit link between India and the foreign
       interference activities. Proxies liaise and work with Indian
       intelligence officials in India and in Canada, taking both explicit
       and implicit direction from them," the report said.
        
       A sign shows Nijjar outside the Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara in Surrey,
       British Columbia, on September 18, 2023 [Chris Helgren/Reuters]
        
       ## 'Galvanising' Sikh communities
        
       Ultimately, Sikh leaders have called for a full investigation into all
       those who may be involved in threats against members of their
       communities, including Indian state officials.
        
       "I can't speak to the motivation of the Indian state if it is proven
       that they are behind these heinous attacks," said Kavneet Singh, chair
       of the board of the Sikh American Legal Defense and Education Fund
       (SALDEF), a US-based civil rights group.
        
       "But they have had a long history of suppression of freedom of
       expression and targeting those who speak out in dissent."
        
       Kavneet told Al Jazeera that the American Sikh community is advocating
       at the federal and state levels "for improved legislation to better
       help law enforcement understand, identity and prosecute" instances of
       transnational repression.
        
       He added that, despite the threats, the Sikh community's history "has
       not been one of living in fear".
        
       Instead, "it's one of understanding that there are potential threats,
       and it's [one of] being vigilant," Kavneet said. "In fact, I think
       this is actually galvanising the community and our diasporic allies.
        
       "While there may be political differences amongst communities,
       ultimately we stand together when members of the community and/or our
       institutions are threatened by actors either foreign or domestic."
        
       Singh at the BC Gurdwaras Council echoed that sentiment, stressing
       that the Indian government is trying to "silence" Sikh voices in the
       diaspora who are advocating for a sovereign state.
        
       Singh was among five Sikh leaders — including Nijjar — who were warned
       by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police's national security division in
       2022 about threats against their lives.
        
       He told Al Jazeera on Tuesday that the Canadian authorities told him
       within the past two months that the threat against him "is still real"
       and he should avoid large public gatherings.
        
       "If we speak on this issue [Khalistan] and we're going to lead the
       community on this issue in the diaspora, I think those threats will
       always be there now. There's no way that we can ever go back," he
       said.
        
       "When Hardeep's assassination happened, that really set some clarity
       in for some of us that this is real. This is the new real for us and
       the new reality, that this can happen at any time."
        
        
        
        
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