Pro-Khalistani Groups Sabotage Canada's Pivotal India Reset Under Carney

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney's crucial visit to India aims to rebuild relations and double bilateral trade to $51 billion by 2030. However, pro-Khalistani extremist groups in Canada are staging targeted protests, including desecrating Indian symbols, to sabotage the diplomatic reset. The report notes Indian officials have repeatedly called Khalistani extremism a "Canadian problem" Ottawa must address internally. It warns that allowing fringe elements to intimidate diplomats constitutes economic sabotage that could hold Canada's future prosperity hostage.

Key Points: Khalistani Groups Threaten Canada-India Trade Reset, Report Says

  • Carney's visit aims to reset strained ties
  • Trade target is $51B annually by 2030
  • Protests target symbols, intimidate diplomats
  • Extremism seen as a "Canadian problem"
  • Progress requires commitment free from radical interference
3 min read

Pro-Khalistani groups doing their best to tear down Carney's push to reset ties with India: Report

As PM Mark Carney visits India, extremist groups stage protests to sabotage bilateral ties and a $51 billion trade goal, a report warns.

"A handful of extremists should not be allowed to hold Canada's prosperity hostage. - Khalsa Vox report"

Ottawa, March 2

As Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney is on his visit to India -- widely seen as one of the most pivotal diplomatic missions -- a small but disruptive Pro-Khalistan extremist group operating within the North American nation is attempting to sabotage efforts to rebuild bilateral ties, a report said on Monday.

"The stakes could not be higher. Carney's trip is designed to unlock new opportunities for Canadian workers and businesses across trade, energy, technology, and defence. Canada aims to more than double two-way trade with India to roughly $51 billion annually by 2030 -- a cornerstone of Carney's strategy to reduce Canada's dangerous over-reliance on the United States," a report in Khalsa Vox detailed.

The report also highlights that the agenda is "immense", as the focus will be on cooperation agreements covering nuclear power, oil, critical minerals, AI, quantum computing, and education.

"This is not diplomacy for diplomacy's sake. It is an economic lifeline-building. And yet, even as Carney works to reset relations poisoned by years of Trudeau-era tensions, extremist groups are doing their best to tear it down," it added.

According to the report, targeted protests have intensified in Canada in recent weeks, with supporters of Khalistani terrorist Hardeep Singh Nijjar staging inflammatory acts -- including tearing and burning symbols associated with India and openly threatening Canadian PM Mark Carney -- apparently designed to strain bilateral cooperation.

It added that such conduct cannot be called a peaceful protest but amounts to deliberate interference in sovereign diplomacy.

The report highlighted how a small pro-Khalistan fringe tried to derail British Columbia Premier David Eby's trade mission to India in January, by waving Khalistan flags and demanding his resignation, accusing him of placing trade over "justice".

The same tactic, it said, is directed against Carney's high-stakes visit as Groups like Sikhs for Justice, flagged by Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) for involvement in "politically motivated violent extremism", portraying every act of Canadian economic self-interest as betrayal without offering any constructive alternative.

"The costs of tolerating this behaviour are real and measurable. Indian officials have repeatedly described Khalistani extremism as a 'Canadian problem' that Ottawa must address internally to foster genuine reconciliation, emphasising that progress on trade and diplomacy depends on both sides demonstrating commitment free from radical interference," the report noted.

Ottawa, it said, cannot seek New Delhi's trust as a long-term partner while simultaneously allowing fringe elements to "desecrate Indian symbols and intimidate diplomats on Canadian soil".

The report further said, "The message to Canadian authorities must be equally clear: protect this diplomatic moment. Free speech ends where deliberate economic sabotage and intimidation of foreign diplomats begin. A handful of extremists should not be allowed to hold Canada's prosperity hostage. The country's future is being negotiated in New Delhi -- and it deserves to succeed."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
As an Indian living in Canada, I see both sides. Most Sikhs here are peaceful and love India. These extremist groups don't represent us. They are harming the community's reputation and hurting crucial ties. Canada must curb this.
A
Arun Y
The report is spot on. India has been patient. You can't burn our flag, threaten our diplomats, and then expect a warm handshake for trade deals. Trust is a two-way street. Hope PM Carney understands the gravity.
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Sarah B
While I respect free speech, burning flags and intimidating officials crosses a line into hate and sabotage. Canada's prosperity is at stake. The government needs to protect this diplomatic mission from deliberate disruption.
K
Karthik V
$51 billion in trade means jobs and growth for both nations! AI, quantum, energy... the potential is huge. It's sad that a few people stuck in the past are trying to block a brighter future for everyone.
M
Michael C
A respectful criticism: The article frames this well, but we must also acknowledge that India needs to engage more with the legitimate concerns of the Sikh diaspora, separating them from extremists. Dialogue is key for lasting peace.
N
Neha E
Finally, some clear reporting! For years, this

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