Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
International

Blinken on Canada-India rift: 'Those responsible must be held accountable'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Sep, 2023 02:27 PM
  • Blinken on Canada-India rift: 'Those responsible must be held accountable'

America's top diplomat is again urging India and Canada to work together on bringing Hardeep Singh Nijjar's killers to justice — and hopefully forestall a deepening of a serious geopolitical rift between two important allies. 

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said he delivered that message Thursday during his meeting in Washington, D.C., with Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, India's external affairs minister. 

Relations between Canada and India have plumbed new depths since Prime Minister Justin Trudeau cited "credible allegations" of links between the Indian government and the shooting death of Nijjar, a prominent Sikh separatist and Canadian citizen. 

"We're very concerned about the allegations that have been raised by Canada, by Prime Minister Trudeau," Blinken told a news conference Friday. 

"Those responsible need to be held accountable, and we hope that our friends in both Canada and India will work together to resolve this matter."

Blinken said the U.S. has been in close contact with both countries about the allegations ever since Trudeau made them public earlier this month in the House of Commons. 

"At the same time, we have engaged with the Indian government and urged them to work with Canada on an investigation, and I had the opportunity to do so again in my meeting yesterday with Foreign Minister Jaishankar."

A State Department readout of that meeting made no mention of the controversy, but experts in international diplomacy say that's hardly surprising. 

The allegations have put the U.S. in an awkward spot, with the Biden administration courting India as it works to develop a geopolitical bulwark against the mounting influence of China. 

Trudeau, who expressly asked Blinken to reiterate Canada's concerns with Jaishankar, paid a visit Friday to a community centre in Brampton, Ont., a Toronto suburb that's home to Canada's largest Sikh population. 

He moved through an outdoor picnic area, where he encountered a number of people worried about the tensions and the safety of members of the Indo-Canadian community. 

"It's very, very complicated times right now," Trudeau said. "It's a time where we have to pull together, we have to be there for each other." 

At another table, he acknowledged the challenge of navigating such serious allegations with a country that is widely seen around the world as a vital economic and geopolitical ally with the West.

"Every Canadian, regardless of where they come from, needs to be safe in this country," Trudeau said.

"That's something that even as we look to work and grow our trade ties around the world, including with India, we have to be unequivocal about the rules being the rules."

Diplomacy under such circumstances can be a tricky and nuanced endeavour. But the U.S. has already taken steps to ensure Trudeau had at least some support from inside the so-called Five Eyes security alliance. 

That came last week from David Cohen, the U.S. envoy to Canada, who confirmed that  Canada's allegations were supported in part by intelligence from inside that alliance, which includes the U.S., the U.K., Australia and New Zealand. 

"I think the Americans feel they have backed up the head of the government, the prime minister, with the comments of the ambassador," said Gary Doer, who spent more than six years as Canada's envoy to D.C. 

"I think if they hadn't been public through their ambassador, you could look for a tilt, but they did get somebody out there to back up the prime minister."

A strong economic and diplomatic relationship with India is as important for Canada as it is for the U.S., he added. 

"It's not one versus the other. I think we benefit both ways. And so do they." 

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Friday, Sept. 29. 

MORE International ARTICLES

White House escalates extreme-heat efforts as record July marks 'global boiling' era

White House escalates extreme-heat efforts as record July marks 'global boiling' era
The hottest month in recorded history is going out with a bang in the United States. Much of the eastern half of the U.S. sweltered Friday in temperatures that felt as high as 44 C in population centres like New York, Kansas City and Washington, D.C, as July's oppressive "heat dome" drifted north. 

White House escalates extreme-heat efforts as record July marks 'global boiling' era

US to hold second round of H-1B visa lottery for FY 2024

US to hold second round of H-1B visa lottery for FY 2024
In March this year, the USCIS conducted an initial random selection on properly submitted electronic registrations for the fiscal year 2024 H-1B cap, including for beneficiaries eligible for the advanced degree exemption. Only those petitioners with selected registrations for FY 2024 are eligible to file H-1B cap-subject petitions.  

US to hold second round of H-1B visa lottery for FY 2024

Indian-origin fraudster sentenced to jail for targeting elderly victims in UK

Indian-origin fraudster sentenced to jail for targeting elderly victims in UK
Kishan Bhatt of no fixed address was sentenced at Snaresbrook Crown Court on Tuesday for committing nine counts of fraud by false representation after pleading guilty in November 2022 at the same court. Bhatt targeted nine victims  aged between 29 and 90 who were approached whilst he posed as a bank employee, a landlord and a police officer.

Indian-origin fraudster sentenced to jail for targeting elderly victims in UK

UK opens second ballot for Young Professional visa scheme for Indians

UK opens second ballot for Young Professional visa scheme for Indians
The ballot, which opened on Monday, will close at 1.30 p.m. on Thursday, the British High Commission announced in a tweet. The scheme, formally launched this year, allows Indian citizens with a graduate or postgraduate qualification to live and work in the UK for up to two years.

UK opens second ballot for Young Professional visa scheme for Indians

'Only 1 rice bag per family': Write US stores after India bans export

'Only 1 rice bag per family': Write US stores after India bans export
After the Indian government prohibited the export of non-basmati rice, many departmental stores in the US are limiting the number of rice bags customers can purchase. A user on Twitter (now X) has shared a picture in which a notice put up by a store in the US, says, "Only one rice bag per family".  

'Only 1 rice bag per family': Write US stores after India bans export

Bodycam footage shows US cop fatally hit Indian student in Jan 2023

Bodycam footage shows US cop fatally hit Indian student in Jan 2023
Jaahnavi Kandula, a student of Northeastern University campus in South Lake Union, was walking near Dexter Avenue North and Thomas Street when she was hit by a Seattle Police vehicle driven by Kevin Dave on January 23. Dave, who was responding to a “high priority” call that day at 8 pm, had chirped his siren, but did not have it running consistently, as he plowed into Kandula

Bodycam footage shows US cop fatally hit Indian student in Jan 2023