Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Decades-Old Sikh Massacre Looms Over Canadian Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan's India Trip

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Apr, 2017 11:35 AM
    OTTAWA — Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan says he hopes the Indian government will do more to find justice for the thousands of Sikhs who were killed in violent riots more than 30 years ago.
     
    Sajjan is on a bit of a homecoming to the Asian country, where he was born and lived until coming to Canada with his family when he was five years old.
     
    But while the main purpose of the trip is to establish closer ties between the two countries, Sajjan says the deaths that occurred across India in 1984 in the wake of Indira Gandhi's assassination have figured prominently in his meetings.
     
    Sajjan says he shares the concerns raised by some Sikhs in Canada that too little has been done to seek justice for the victims.
     
     
    He says Indian officials had their own strong words for a recent motion that was adopted in the Ontario legislature which labelled the killings a genocide.
     
    Sajjan also says he is disappointed with the comments of one Indian political leader who labelled him a Sikh nationalist, but is determined to avoid being sucked into internal Indian politics.
     
     
    INDIAN LEADER ACCUSES CANADIAN DEFENCE MINISTER OF BEING SIKH NATIONALIST
     
     
    Amarinder Singh, the top elected official in India's Punjab province, where Sajjan was born, made the explosive accusation in an interview on Indian TV in advance of Sajjan's trip.
     
    In the interview, Singh expressed anger over not being allowed to speak at political rallies in Canada last year before calling Sajjan and the other Sikh members of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's cabinet "Khalistanis."
     
     
    "I'm not going to meet him," Singh said. "There are five ministers who are Khalistanis and I am not interested in meeting any Khalistanis."
     
    The Khalistani movement is comprised of Sikhs who want to create an independent homeland and became synonymous with a wave of violence that swept across India in the 1980s.
     
    Authorities believe Khalistani extremists were also responsible for the Air India bombing, the worst terrorist attack in Canadian history, which killed 329 people in 1985.
     
    Indian authorities have since cracked down on the more violent Khalistani groups inside the country, but warned that the separatists continue to enjoy support in Canada and other places.
     
     
    Sajjan's spokeswoman, Renee Filiatrault, refused Tuesday to be drawn into a war of words with Singh, saying the defence minister's trip was intended to strengthen ties between Canada and India.
     
    "Minister Sajjan is a proud Canadian, with a lifetime of service to Canada," Filiatrault said in an email, adding: "He is not scheduled to meet with any representatives from the Punjab government."
     
    Sikh groups in Canada and India expressed shock and anger at Singh's comment, with some accusing the him of being undiplomatic and others accusing him of trying to distract attention from Punjab's economic problems.
     
    Some noted that other senior Indian leaders, including Defence Minister Arun Jaitley, met Sajjan during the Canadian minister's visit, indicating they don't believe he is a Khalistani sympathizer.
     
    Gurpatwant Pannun, senior counsel for the Toronto-based Sikhs for Justice, said the furor appears to have arisen because Singh was prevented from speaking at political rallies in Canada last year.
     
     
     
    While Singh did not say during the TV interview why he wasn't allowed to speak, Pannun said his group raised the issue with the Liberal government in April 2016.
     
    "To get support from the Sikh diaspora and collect funds, these leaders go to the United States and Canada," Pannun said, whose group wants a peaceful referendum on an independent Khalistan.
     
    "But we found out there is a political law that you cannot address political gatherings. So we wrote to the foreign affairs minister."
     
    Indian media have reported that the Canadian government warned Singh against attending the rallies.
     
    Sajjan was born in the Punjab village of Bombeli before emigrating to Canada with his parents when he was five.
     
    Questions about his links to the World Sikh Organization were raised during the messy nomination battle that he won to represent the Liberals in the riding of Vancouver South in December 2014.
     
    But Sajjan rejected suggestions he wanted to break up India or was a member of the WSO, which has long been associated with wanting the creation of an independent Khalistan.
     
    Sajjan is one of four Sikh ministers in Trudeau's cabinet, the others being Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains, House Leader Bardish Chagger and Infrastructure Minister Amarjeet Sohi.
     
    Sohi was arrested and detained in the Indian state of Bihar from 1988 to 1990 on false allegations he was trying to train Khalistani extremists.
     
    This is Sajjan's first trip to India as defence minister.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall Posts Video To Tell Residents About Tax 'Shift' In Budget

    Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall Posts Video To Tell Residents About Tax 'Shift' In Budget
    REGINA — Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall has posted a video message on Facebook in which he says there will be tax increases in the upcoming provincial budget.

    Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall Posts Video To Tell Residents About Tax 'Shift' In Budget

    Suspect In Fatal Shooting Dies Of Self-Inflicted Gunshot Wound: Police

    Suspect In Fatal Shooting Dies Of Self-Inflicted Gunshot Wound: Police
    BURLINGTON, Ont. — Police say a suspect in the fatal shooting of a southern Ontario chiropractor has died in hospital.

    Suspect In Fatal Shooting Dies Of Self-Inflicted Gunshot Wound: Police

    Canadian Teacher Maggie MacDonnell Wins $1-Million Award For Teaching Excellence

    Canadian Teacher Maggie MacDonnell Wins $1-Million Award For Teaching Excellence
      Maggie MacDonnell was awarded the annual Global Teacher Prize during a ceremony in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, beating out thousands of applicants from around the world.

    Canadian Teacher Maggie MacDonnell Wins $1-Million Award For Teaching Excellence

    St. Catharines, Ont., Man Wanted For 1st-Degree Murder In Death Of Stepson, 7

    St. Catharines, Ont., Man Wanted For 1st-Degree Murder In Death Of Stepson, 7
    ST. CATHARINES, Ont. — Police in southern Ontario say they're continuing the search for a man accused of killing his seven-year-old stepson.

    St. Catharines, Ont., Man Wanted For 1st-Degree Murder In Death Of Stepson, 7

    Police Allege Ex-Patient Shot And Killed Ontario Chiropractor In His Clinic

    Police Allege Ex-Patient Shot And Killed Ontario Chiropractor In His Clinic
    Halton regional police say Ferdinand Mejilla, 50, was gunned down at his clinic in Burlington, Ont., just after noon on Thursday and died later in hospital.

    Police Allege Ex-Patient Shot And Killed Ontario Chiropractor In His Clinic

    Mourners Gather In Quebec For Funeral Of RCMP Constable Killed In Collision

    Mourners Gather In Quebec For Funeral Of RCMP Constable Killed In Collision
    SAINT-JEAN-SUR-RICHELIEU, Que. — Mourners are gathering on a military base southeast of Montreal for a regimental funeral for an RCMP officer who died after a crash between his vehicle and a farm tractor.

    Mourners Gather In Quebec For Funeral Of RCMP Constable Killed In Collision