Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

India resuming some visa services at high commission, consulates in Canada

Darpan News Desk IANS, 25 Oct, 2023 09:42 AM
  • India resuming some visa services at high commission, consulates in Canada

India's high commission in Canada said on Wednesday that the country's officials will resume processing some types of visa applications in Ottawa and at consulates in Toronto and Vancouver.

The decision came a month after New Delhi suspended the services in Canada and for Canadian citizens worldwide.

The high commission said it is resuming business, medical and conference visas, as well as entry for people with family ties in India, beginning on Thursday, October 26th. It did not include information about other types of visas.

The Canadian Press confirmed the authenticity of social-media posts about the decision, and has sought clarity on whether tourist, student and journalist visas will also be processed. 

The resumption of what India calls an entry visa, which is restricted to "persons of Indian origin," or spouses or children of such persons or of Indian citizens, follows uproar online from Canadians who have been unable to visit their relatives during the country's wedding season. 

India introduced the restrictions on visas last month after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced in the House of Commons that Canada's intelligence services were probing "credible" information about "a potential link" between India's government and the killing of a Canadian Sikh leader in British Columbia.

India stopped issuing visas in Ottawa, Toronto and Vancouver on Sept. 21, and eventually stopped serving Canadian citizens in other parts of the world, too. 

The statement from the high commission did not indicate whether Canadians in other countries can now also apply for visas through India's missions worldwide.

New Delhi argued the reason for the move was that its diplomats in Canada could not safely get to work.

That was despite High Commissioner Sanjay Kumar Verma saying in an interview with The Canadian Press three weeks earlier that he was "very satisfied" with Canada for ramping up protections.

The diplomatic mission said it chose to resume processing some visa services starting on Thursday "after a considered review of the security situation that takes into account some recent Canadian measures in this regard."

It noted that "further decisions, as appropriate, would be intimated based on continuing evaluation of the situation."

Before Trudeau's announcement dramatically heightened tensions between Canada and India, New Delhi had publicly denounced protests by Sikh separatist groups outside its diplomatic missions in Canada, as well as posters that appeared to offer cash rewards in exchange for the home addresses of Indian diplomats.

India formally called on Canada to better uphold its duty to protect foreign diplomats.

Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly said on Sept. 14 that Indian diplomats in Canada "have 24/7 security," which is a service Ottawa offers to very few diplomatic missions.

India's foreign affairs minister, Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, said on the weekend that his country was looking at relaxing the visa restrictions. 

"We stopped issuing visas in Canada because it was no longer safe for our diplomats to go to work to issue visas," he said on Sunday.

Jaishankar also said he took issue with the federal Liberals, in comments that analysts said marked the first time that New Delhi had framed its concerns with Canada along political lines.

"The problems we have are with a certain segment of Canadian politics, and the policies which flow from that," Jaishankar said.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Ibrahim Ali trial

Ibrahim Ali trial
An RCMP expert testifying at Ibrahim Ali's murder trial said the first DNA evidence linking the accused to the killing of a 13-year-old girl in Burnaby, B.C., came from a discarded cigarette butt. Christine Crossman says Ali's DNA from the cigarette was then matched to the DNA recovered from the body of the girl who was found dead in Burnaby's Central Park six years ago.

Ibrahim Ali trial

Man walked naked out of shower, found Mountie in his bedroom: lawsuit

Man walked naked out of shower, found Mountie in his bedroom: lawsuit
A British Columbia man who is suing the RCMP claims he walked naked out of his shower to find a female uniformed Mountie standing in his bedroom. Kirk Forbes says the encounter in his Coquitlam home in June 2022 left him "shocked, confused and embarrassed."  

Man walked naked out of shower, found Mountie in his bedroom: lawsuit

Small plane with engine failure makes emergency landing on highway near Salmo, B.C.

Small plane with engine failure makes emergency landing on highway near Salmo, B.C.
Mounties in southeastern British Columbia say the pilot of a small plane used Highway 6 as a runway after experiencing engine trouble.  Police say a member of the public informed them on Tuesday that the plane was parked on the side of the highway, near Salmo.  

Small plane with engine failure makes emergency landing on highway near Salmo, B.C.

Pedestrian dies in Abbotsford crash

Pedestrian dies in Abbotsford crash
Police in Abbotsford say a 35-year-old pedestrian died late last night after being hit by a vehicle. The death came just hours after an unrelated head-on crash involving two vehicles in the southwest corner of Abbotsford, leaving both drivers -- a 49-year-old man and 29-year-old woman -- with potentially life-threatening injuries.

Pedestrian dies in Abbotsford crash

Weeks of worry ease as alerts lift for two B.C. wildfires outside Kamloops, Lillooet

Weeks of worry ease as alerts lift for two B.C. wildfires outside Kamloops, Lillooet
The Thompson-Nicola Regional District has issued the "all clear" to residents affected by the Ross Moore Lake fire which was sparked by lightning nine weeks ago and scorched nearly 114 square kilometres before being held. The B.C. Wildfire Service says an area restriction order covering travel through the fire zone remains in effect until at least Friday.

Weeks of worry ease as alerts lift for two B.C. wildfires outside Kamloops, Lillooet

B.C. aware of dike problems before destructive flooding in 2021, documents show

B.C. aware of dike problems before destructive flooding in 2021, documents show
The documents obtained by the B.C. office of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives show a registered professional engineer found numerous problems in 2018 with dikes protecting the community in the province's southern Interior.  Dike maintenance is a municipal responsibility but with provincial oversight.

B.C. aware of dike problems before destructive flooding in 2021, documents show