World

India Wants Firm action On Pro-Khalistan Groups

India’s capital, New Delhi, demanded on Thursday that all nations where pro-Khalistan organisations are waging campaigns to incite violence against Indian diplomats and posts take decisive action. The country also warned that freedom of expression should not be abused to advance separatism and justify terrorism.
The request from the external affairs ministry came days after Khalistani protestors set fire to the Indian consulate in San Francisco and launched a poster campaign inciting violence against senior diplomats in Australia, Canada, the US, and the UK. Pro-Khalistan organisations, particularly the outlawed Sikhs For Justice (SFJ), have made plans for a protest to “Kill India” on July 8 in these four nations.

The comments by the external affairs ministry spokesperson Arindam Bagchi at a regular media briefing came hours after UK’s foreign secretary James Cleverly stressed that any direct attacks on the Indian mission in London are “completely unacceptable”, and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told the media in his country that he has always taken threats of violence seriously.
“Any direct attacks on the Indian High Commission in London are completely unacceptable. We have made clear to @VDoraiswami and the Government of India that the safety of staff at the High Commission is paramount,” Cleverly tweeted on Thursday. Vikram Doraiswamy is the Indian high commissioner to the UK.

Over in Ottawa, asked by a reporter about a recent parade float depicting the assassination of former premier Indira Gandhi and the Indian leadership’s contention that the Canadian government is soft on Sikh extremism because it relies on votes from the community, Trudeau replied: “They are wrong. Canada has always taken extremely seriously violence and threats of violence. We have always taken serious action against terrorism, and we always will.” Canada has freedom of expression but will always push back against violence and extremism in all forms, Trudeau added.
Over the past few days, the Indian side has been particularly irked by Canada’s response to activities of pro-Khalistan groups, and Canadian envoy Cameron Mackay was summoned to the external affairs ministry on Monday and served a demarche or written protest over the threat to Indian diplomats.

“Our sense is that these posters inciting violence against our diplomats and our diplomatic premises abroad are unacceptable and we condemn them in the strongest terms,” Bagchi said on Thursday while responding to questions on the issue at a regular media briefing.

“It is a matter of concern that freedom of expression and speech is once again being misused by anti-India elements based in Canada and elsewhere,” he added. “Let me make the larger point that the issue is not about freedom of expression but its misuse for advocating violence, propagating separatism and legitimising terrorism.”
The safety of Indian diplomats and security of missions is an “utmost priority” for the government, and host governments are responsible for providing protection under the Vienna Conventions, Bagchi said. The Indian side has put in place its own security measures and expects host governments to take action “commensurate with the threat perception”, he added.

People familiar with the matter said the matter has been strongly taken up with authorities in Australia, Canada, the UK and the US, and the host governments have been asked to bolster security for Indian missions ahead of the rally on July 8. “Our message has been simple – there should be no space for misusing freedom of expression,” one of the people cited above said.
The people said authorities in the US responded with alacrity while the response in some countries was found to be wanting. The poster campaign inciting violence against senior diplomats and the call for a rally on July 8 began in Canada and was then spread by Khalistani elements in other countries. There are clear signs the SFJ is playing a leading role in these campaigns, they said.

Bagchi was also asked about remarks by Trudeau and Cleverly denouncing the violence, and said India will judge these countries by “what happens on the ground”. India is pressing the Canadian side to “ensure that our diplomats can carry out their normal functions without fear or intimidation”, he said.

Bagchi noted in the context of Trudeau’s comments that external affairs minister S Jaishankar had said “he strongly believes countries should not pander to vote bank politics”.
“In the name of freedom of expression, we should not be giving space to those who advocate violence or propagate separatism or legitimise terrorism,” Bagchi added.

The campaigns by pro-Khalistan groups have been linked to the killing of Khalistani separatist leader Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a designated terrorist, in Canada last month. These groups have portrayed a so-called “Indian hand” in Nijjar’s death and incited violence against Indian diplomats.

When asked about the SFJ leader Gurpatwant Pannun’s social media post of himself outside the UN headquarters in New York, who is also a designated terrorist, Bagchi responded, “I don’t think taking a video in front of the UN building lends it any greater legitimacy.” He claimed that since the SFJ is outlawed, the Indian side has repeatedly responded to threats made by the organisation and its alleged “Khalistan referendum” and ordered allies to stop such actions.
The planned march and the poster campaign, according to Ajay Bisaria, a former envoy to Canada who has long followed the actions of Khalistani elements, are “signs of extreme desperation on the part of the Khalistani groups, rather than a resurgence.”

“This is the last gasp of the SFJ, which is feeling cornered after Nijjar’s death and Pannun himself is in hiding. Their fear is that India’s heft is so much that it is getting host governments to turn the heat on these groups. It is more of a demonstration of strength to their own cadres and an expression of anguish at the killing of one of their senior leaders, though there is no certainty whether it was a gangland or a targeted killing,” he said.

(This story has not been edited by Bharat Express staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Bharat Express English

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