Canada PM Trudeau may Target Hindus for Political Survival

G GOWTHAM
Six indian diplomats, led by High Commissioner Sanjay Kumar Verma, have been removed by india in order to prevent harassment by groups that support Khalistani politics and are expected to arrive in india by saturday afternoon at the latest via several aircraft with covert routes.
Nine indian ambassadors will remain in canada, while 15 Canadian diplomats will remain in india following the expulsion of six diplomats who were requested to go by saturday afternoon by the Modi administration. There used to be 12 indian resident diplomats in Ottawa and 62 Canadian resident diplomats in delhi, back before Trudeau's policies damaged ties between the two countries.

While the Canadian government has broken the unwritten rule that it will not pursue criminal charges against diplomats, prime minister Justin Trudeau is anticipated to support Jagmeet Singh's pro-Khalistani New Democratic party and use his political clout to target Canadian Hindus on the grounds that they are hostile to both Muslims and Sikhs in order to ensure his own survival. On june 18, 2023, Trudeau is anticipated to ask other political parties in canada for help in his plan to take india to task for the death of terrorist Hardeep Singh Nijjar.
 

In addition to seeking the backing of the Anglo-Saxon west, the Canadian prime minister briefed the Five Eyes Alliance about the diplomatic conflict with india, presumably with an eye on his hardline Sikh allies. Under the radar, pakistan and its deep state are attempting to further sever ties with india through the National Council of Canadian Muslims.
 
Observers in canada claim that Trudeau would utilize the Royal Canadian Mounted police (RCMP) and the Foreign Interference Commission to pin india in the terrorist Hardeep Singh Nijjar case in order to maintain his political survival.
 

If Justin Trudeau's claims about the Nijjar case were so clear-cut, then why hasn't the Royal Mounted Canadian police, the investigative agency, yet submitted a charge sheet? A senior diplomat questioned, "Why hasn't the Canadian government released any proof connecting indian operatives to the terrorist murder of the Khalistan tiger Force?
 

It is obvious that Trudeau would utilize the comments of lawyers for outlawed SFJ to Foreign Interference Commission to accuse india in order to get Khalistani votes in canada, as the inquiry did not permit any counter-view group to participate in the public hearing. On october 16, the day after the Safety minister resigns before the Commission, prime minister Justin Trudeau is scheduled to testify. A senior security officer declared, "It is a one-sided investigation...a sham...and the whole idea is to defame india and its government."
 

Even though the RCMP hasn't even filed a charge sheet in the Nijjar murder investigation, Trudeau's radical Sikh vote in the Canadian parliament on september 18 proclaimed india guilty. It is believed that the next step for canada will be to accuse one of the four Sikh youths who were detained of murder so that Nijjar may become an approver and utilize his testimony before the RCMP to file an indictment against India. Since every individual detained is a Canadian citizen or an asylum seeker, they would be more than delighted to accuse india in court without the presence of an indian attorney.
 
High Commissioner Sanjay Verma has already been the target of a half-million Canadian dollar bounty when Khalistanis "shot and burned" his effigy in Vancouver last Saturday.
 

Despite Trudeau's desire to hold india accountable for foreign meddling in Canadian elections, indian intelligence has shown that representatives of the Canadian High Commission in delhi and its consulate in chandigarh were secretly interacting with the ruling party in both delhi and Punjab. In addition, the Canadians were attempting to inflame Sikh sentiment in punjab by supporting the so-called farmers' movement and manipulating the human rights narrative to criticize the Modi administration.
 
 

Find Out More:

Related Articles: