Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian PM, Politicians Must Not Attend Events Glorifying Militants: Ujjal Dosanjh

IANS, 22 Feb, 2018 01:19 PM
    Reacting to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s assurance to Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh to curb Sikh separatists in Canada, former Canadian health minister Ujjal Dosanjh has said that politicians in this country have failed to appreciate India’s deep sensitivities about Khalistani activities.
     
     
    “India is very sensitive about this issue because that country was partitioned in 1947 and 14 million people died. Indians will under no circumstances allow another division of their country.
     
     
    “Canadian politicians, including the Prime Minister, must start appreciating India’s deep sensitivities on this issue,” said Dosanjh, who was the first person of colour to become Premier (equal to Chief Minister) in Canada in 2000 when he was elected to the post in British Columbia.
     
     
    He said Canadian politicians, including Trudeau, had been publicly associating with separatists for a long time without any backlash from India.
     
     
    “There has been no blowback from India till now despite Canadian politicians going to parades, processions and events where posters of Air India bomber Talwinder Singh Parmar and other militants are displayed and they are celebrated as heroes.
     
     
    “Our Prime Minister and politicians have been taking part in these events, but India has been silently watching this for many years. I hope that Trudeau and others start appreciating India’s worries,” said Dosanjh.
     
     
    The former Canadian minister said Prime Minister Narendra Modi reportedly took Trudeau aside at Davos and told him that Khalistani activities in Canada were becoming a serious issue.
     
     
     
     
    He said that is why Trudeau’s two ministers, Harjit Sajjan and Amarjeet Sohi, made the statement that they had nothing to do with Khalistan just before their departure for India.
     
     
    He said if Canadian politicians stopped pandering to separatists and going to their events, the Khalistan movement would die quickly.
     
     
    Dosanjh said Trudeau’s statements about India’s unity would be meaningless if politicians kept going to the events where militants were glorified.
     
     
    “I cannot stop anyone from glorifying anyone, but what I can do is stop going to such events. This is what Trudeau and other politicians should do now. Or they should insist that they will not attend such events if the killers of innocent people are glorified.”
     
     
    If Canadian politicians wanted to have good relations with India, they had to genuinely support the idea of a united India, Dosanjh said.
    He also blamed India for not framing the issue properly to force Canada to act.
     
     
     
     
    Trudeau is currently in India on an eight-day visit. 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Begins Dog Sled Journey Across Canada: 'We're Going To Face Some Adversities'

    Man Begins Dog Sled Journey Across Canada: 'We're Going To Face Some Adversities'
    A New Brunswick man left northern Manitoba Monday on a highly unlikely journey home — a 3,000-kilometre trek by dog sled.

    Man Begins Dog Sled Journey Across Canada: 'We're Going To Face Some Adversities'

    Man Grabbed Boy By Throat In Kingston, Ont., Road Rage Incident, Police Allege

    KINGSTON, Ont. — A 46-year-old man is facing charges after allegedly attacking a child in a road rage incident in eastern Ontario.

    Man Grabbed Boy By Throat In Kingston, Ont., Road Rage Incident, Police Allege

    Saskatchewan Rush Fan Dressed As Hulk Banned From Calgary Lacrosse Game

    Saskatchewan Rush Fan Dressed As Hulk Banned From Calgary Lacrosse Game
    WARMAN, Sask. — A man who dresses up as the Incredible Hulk at Saskatchewan Rush lacrosse games says he's been banned from this weekend's game in Calgary against the Roughnecks.

    Saskatchewan Rush Fan Dressed As Hulk Banned From Calgary Lacrosse Game

    Man Faces 48 Charges In String Of Random Toronto Shootings, Police Say

    Man Faces 48 Charges In String Of Random Toronto Shootings, Police Say
    TORONTO — A 20-year-old man is facing dozens of charges, including seven counts of attempted murder, in what police describe as a string of unprovoked, random shootings in Toronto that narrowly missed being fatal.

    Man Faces 48 Charges In String Of Random Toronto Shootings, Police Say

    Daughter Of Winnipeg Couple Killed In Jamaica Faces Hurdles Bringing Them Home

    Daughter Of Winnipeg Couple Killed In Jamaica Faces Hurdles Bringing Them Home
    WINNIPEG — The daughter of a Winnipeg couple killed in Jamaica says she is facing several challenges as she works to bring their bodies back to Canada.

    Daughter Of Winnipeg Couple Killed In Jamaica Faces Hurdles Bringing Them Home

    Fire Doused After Tanker Truck And Rail Car Collide In Port Coquitlam, B.C.

    Fire Doused After Tanker Truck And Rail Car Collide In Port Coquitlam, B.C.
    PORT COQUITLAM, B.C. — A spectacular fire, fuelled by ethanol, has been allowed to burn out in Port Coquitlam, B.C.

    Fire Doused After Tanker Truck And Rail Car Collide In Port Coquitlam, B.C.