Key Points

India and Canada are working to reinstate High Commissioners after last year's diplomatic fallout over the Nijjar case. PM Modi and new Canadian PM Mark Carney discussed rebuilding ties during a G7 Summit meeting. The two nations had expelled diplomats following Trudeau's allegations, which India called "absurd." Both sides now aim to restore cooperation in trade, tech, and energy sectors.

Key Points: India Canada Work to Reinstate High Commissioners After Diplomatic Row

  • Modi and Carney reaffirm India-Canada ties at G7 Summit
  • Diplomatic tensions rose after Trudeau's Nijjar allegations
  • Both nations expelled envoys amid 2023 dispute
  • Trade, tech, and energy collaboration back on agenda
3 min read

India, Canada working on reinstatement of High Commissioners: MEA

India and Canada aim to restore High Commissioners after tensions over Nijjar case, with PM Modi and Mark Carney agreeing to rebuild ties.

"Both sides agreed to take calibrated steps to restore stability in the relationship – Randhir Jaiswal, MEA Spokesperson"

New Delhi, June 26

The Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) on Wednesday stated that India and Canada are working to reinstate the High Commissioners to each other's capitals. The move follows efforts to normalise relations that had deteriorated sharply last year.

At a press briefing, MEA Spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Canadian counterpart Mark Carney had reaffirmed the importance of India-Canada ties during a meeting on the sidelines of the G7 Summit in Kananaskis, Canada. He added that both sides agreed to take constructive steps to "restore stability" in the relationship.

"We had issued a press release when we had the last meeting of PM Modi with Prime Minister Carney, on the sidelines of G7 in Kananaskis in Alberta. Both leaders then reaffirmed the importance of India-Canada ties based on shared democratic values, respect for the rule of law, and commitment to upholding the principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity. Both sides agreed to take calibrated and constructive steps to restore stability in the relationship, beginning with the early return of high commissioners to each other's capitals," Randhir Jaiswal said.

"That was what was agreed between the prime ministers. Both countries are now working on this particular matter," he added.

Diplomatic tensions between the two nations flared up last year after then Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau alleged that his government had "credible allegations" of India's involvement in the killing of Khalistani terrorist Hardeep Singh Nijjar in Canada in 2023.

India had strongly denied the charges, calling them "absurd" and "motivated." In response, India recalled six diplomats, including its High Commissioner to Canada, after they were labelled "persons of interest" by Canadian authorities investigating the killing. India also expelled six Canadian diplomats, including Canada's High Commissioner to India.

Nijjar was shot dead outside a gurdwara in Surrey, British Columbia, on June 18, 2023.

With Mark Carney now serving as the Canadian Prime Minister after Trudeau's resignation, both countries appear to be taking steps to improve ties. According to MEA, PM Modi and PM Carney had a "key meeting" at the G7 Summit where they discussed ways to restore and strengthen the bilateral relationship.

India and Canada also agreed to resume senior and working-level mechanisms and discussions in various areas, including: trade, people-to-people contact, connectivity and collaboration in key areas like, cooperating on clean energy and technology initiatives, collaborating on digital infrastructure projects, exploring opportunities for cooperation in artificial intelligence and discussing potential collaboration on food security and critical minerals.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Rajesh K.
Good to see both countries moving forward. The Trudeau episode was unfortunate for India-Canada relations. Hope the new PM understands India's concerns about Khalistani extremism better. Trade and student exchanges are too important to be held hostage by politics 🇮🇳🤝🇨🇦
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Priya M.
As someone with family in both countries, this news brings relief. But Canada must stop sheltering anti-India elements if they truly value this relationship. Our students contribute billions to their economy - they deserve safety from hate groups.
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Amit S.
Clean energy and AI collaboration sound promising! But let's not forget - Canada's previous government damaged trust. India should proceed carefully and ensure our sovereignty is never questioned again. The ball is in Canada's court to rebuild confidence.
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Sunita R.
While normalizing ties is good, I hope our government remains firm on security concerns. The Khalistani issue isn't going away just because Trudeau did. Canada needs to show concrete action against extremists operating from their soil.
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Vikram J.
Positive development, but let's be honest - the damage was deep. Many Indian students are now choosing Australia over Canada due to safety concerns. It will take more than diplomatic niceties to restore the people-to-people connect.
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Neha P.
The focus on digital infrastructure and food security collaborations is smart. These are win-win areas where both nations can benefit without political baggage. Hope this pragmatic approach continues! 🙏

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