
Protest against PM modim in front of the town hall Calgary 16 June 2025 in Calgary, Alberta. | Photo Credit: Getty Pictures via AFP
Canada doubled the accusation of the connection between the Indian government and Nijjar killing, while first acknowledging that Canadian Khalistan extremists (CBKE) continue to plan and finance violence in India on Wednesday (June 18, 2025).
The Canadian Security and Intelligence Service (CSIS), named India, along with China, Iran, Pakistan and Russia as “the main offenders of foreign intervention and espionage against Canada”, was released online on Wednesday (June 18, 2025). And consistently with the bilateral and double -sided sieve and the fact that he was united with the two -sided and number, Rest Ost -commils AM. mechanisms. CSIS was submitted in the Canadian parliament last week.
The Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) refused to comment on a message that indicates that while Canada takes note of India concerns about Khalistan groups than in the past, it maintains its accusations of killing Nijjar and other allegations of foreign interference, including transvaction suppression (TNR), new Delhi).
“The interconnection between the Indian government and Nijjar murder signals significant escalation in Indian efforts to repression against the Khalistan movement and a clear intention to focus on individuals in North America,” said the CSIS annual report in 2024, indicating “forty years of national security”. Referring to the ongoing investigation of the murder of Khalistan activist Hardeep Singh Nijjara, who was shot in Gurdwara outside Toronto in June 2023, said CSIS was arrested and accused of murder and conspiring and ongoing criminal proceedings. It states the investigation “points to the link between India’s government agents and criminal networks with sown of violent activities in the South Asian communities in Canada” and added that six Indian diplomats were ruled out to “disrupt this network”. In October 2024, the Canadian government excluded the Indian High Commissioner Sanjay Kumar Verma and five other Embassy officials on accusations associated with the case that India has occasionally denied and excluded six Canadian diplomats.
The report first added Canadian Khalistan extremist groups to its section on politically motivated violent extremism (PMVE), suggesting that CSIS takes Indian complaints to violence more seriously than before, a source of long -term perspective in Delhi against Ottawa. However, he stated that “some” Khalistan separatist supporters participated in legitimate protests and other activities, “only a small group of individuals is considered to be Khalistan extremists because they continue to use Canada as a base for promotion, fundraising or planning violence.”
CSIS found no attacks in Canada in 2024, but said that their continuing involvement in violent activities “continues to represent the threat of national security for Canada and Canadian interests”, which will find kindness in India.
Be alert, says the message
The report said that Canada “must remain alert about the ongoing foreign intervention carried out by the Indian government, not only in ethnic, religious and cultural communities, but also in the Canadian political system” referring to the official commission against the new Delhi on political interference and alleged “use of performances” in January this year. Mea denied these charges and said it was a Canada that interfered with Indian internal activities rather than vice versa.
The new Delhi is also expected to protest against a politically charged commentary in the latest CSIS report, which connects its charges of multinational repression with Indian election results 2024 and in particular the “Hindu political agenda of the government”. “Prime Minister Modi and his main ministers and advisors want to build Indian global influence and face any activities they consider” anti-India “, at home or abroad, in the name of domestic stability and prosperity,” the report said. It admitted that the Indian history of Canada labeling as an “refuge for anti-index activity” was rooted in the 1985 air bombing and subsequent terrorist activities in India, but added that this perception continues to “control Indian interference activities in Canada.
The CSIS report said that Pakistan also tried to interfere with Canadian policy by helping “pro-Czech” candidates over those who were considered “Pro-India” as well as TNR activities to suppress Pakistan’s dissidents and critics in the country.
Published – June 19, 2025 22:01 is