Expelled Indian high commissioner denies involvement in murder of Sikh leader in Canada

Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, with Minister of Foreign Affairs Melanie Joly, and Minister of Public Safety, Democratic Institutions and Intergovernmental Affairs Dominic LeBlanc, takes part in a press conference about the Royal Canadian Mounted Police's investigation into "violent criminal activity in Canada with connections to India",on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada October 14, 2024. (REUTERS)
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Updated 20 October 2024
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Expelled Indian high commissioner denies involvement in murder of Sikh leader in Canada

  • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police went public this week with allegations that Indian diplomats were targeting Sikh separatists in Canada by sharing information about them with their government back home

VANCOUVER, British Columbia: India’s high commissioner to Canada has denied any involvement in the murder of a Canadian Sikh leader who was killed in British Columbia last year even though the Canadian government has named him as a person of interest in the assassination.
Sanjay Kumar Verma, who was expelled last Monday along with five other Indian diplomats, said in an interview on CTV’s Question Period Sunday that the allegations are politically motivated.
“Nothing at all,” Verma said when asked if he had any role in in the shooting of Hardeep Singh Nijjar who was killed outside a cultural center in Surrey, British Columbia on June 18, 2023. “No evidence presented. Politically motivated.”
Four Indian nationals living in Canada were charged with Nijjar’s murder and are awaiting trial.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police went public this week with allegations that Indian diplomats were targeting Sikh separatists in Canada by sharing information about them with their government back home. They said top Indian officials were then passing that information to Indian organized crime groups who were targeting the activists, who are Canadian citizens, with drive-by shootings, extortions and even murder.
Verma denied the Indian government was targeting Sikh separatists in Canada.
“I, as high commissioner of India, have never done anything of that kind,” he said.
Any action taken by Indian officials in Canada was “overt,” said Verma.
In the interview Verma condemned Nijjar’s death.
“Any murder is wrong and bad,” he said. “I do condemn.”
Verma also pushed back on comments made by Canadian Foreign Minister Melanie Joly that compared India to Russia. She said Canada’s national police force has linked Indian diplomats to homicides, death threats and intimidation in Canada.
“Let me see the concrete evidence she’s talking about,” said Verma. “As far as I’m concerned, she’s talking politically.”
India has rejected the Canadian accusations as absurd, and its foreign ministry said it was expelling Canada’s acting high commissioner and five other diplomats in response.
Verma said “not a shred of evidence has been shared with us” about the Canadian allegations.
The RCMP has said attempts earlier this month to share evidence with Indian officials were unsuccessful.
Verma said the RCMP had not applied for the proper visas to visit India.
“A visa needs to be affixed,” he said. “For any government delegation to travel to another country, you need an agenda to go by. There was no agenda at all.”
Canada is not the only country that has accused Indian officials of plotting an assassination on foreign soil. The US Justice Department announced criminal charges against an Indian government employee Thursday in connection with an alleged foiled plot to kill a Sikh separatist leader living in New York City.
In the case announced by the Justice Department, Vikash Yadav, who authorities say directed the New York plot from India, faces murder-for-hire charges in a planned killing that prosecutors have previously said was meant to precede a string of other politically motivated murders in the United States and Canada.
“An indictment is not a conviction,” Verma said. “It will follow its judicial process.”
India has repeatedly criticized the Canadian government for being soft on supporters of what is known as the Khalistan movement, which is banned in India but has support among the Sikh diaspora, particularly in Canada.
The Khalistan movement supports the establishment of an independent Sikh state in India.
The Nijjar killing in Canada has soured India-Canada ties for more than a year, but Verma doesn’t expect this will impact business relations between the two countries.
“I don’t see much impact on non-political bilateral relations,” he said.

 


Brazil’s President Lula cancels trip to BRICS ummit in Russia after injuring head

Updated 23 sec ago
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Brazil’s President Lula cancels trip to BRICS ummit in Russia after injuring head

  • Lula will participate by videoconference in the BRICS meeting, his office said
  • 3-day meet will bring some 20 world leaders to the city of Kazan beginning Tuesday

RIO DE JANEIRO: Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on Sunday canceled a trip to Russia for a BRICS summit after injuring his head, his office announced.
It did not say how the injury occurred but said he was taken to a hospital where doctors found he had suffered a cut to the back of his head and advised him against long-distance travel.
Local media said Lula had fallen in his bathroom on Saturday night, causing a cut that required stitches.
The 78-year-old Lula will, however, participate by videoconference in the BRICS meeting and will carry on his normal duties this week at the presidential palace in Brasilia, his office said.
The three-day summit of BRICS countries — Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — as well as their partners, will bring some 20 world leaders to the city of Kazan beginning Tuesday.
Russian President Vladimir Putin convened the meeting in what some analysts say was a defiant gesture to show that Russia’s war in Ukraine has not left it isolated.
Lula had been scheduled to leave Brasilia early Sunday evening for Russia.
The BRICS summit would have been Lula’s first face-to-face meeting with Putin this year. In September, the two men spoke by phone to discuss a joint Brazilian-Chinese proposal to end the Ukraine war.
Putin skipped the last BRICS summit in South Africa after the International Criminal Court issued an arrest order for him over Kyiv’s complaint that invading troops had illegally deported Ukrainian children to Russia.
On Friday, Putin announced that he would not attend a G20 summit in Brazil in November because his arrival might “disrupt” the conference.
He insisted that the ICC warrant for his arrest was not a factor, saying “that rulings of this type can be got around very easily.”
 


Nine wounded in Russian strikes on Ukraine’s Kharkiv: local officials

Updated 34 min 31 sec ago
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Nine wounded in Russian strikes on Ukraine’s Kharkiv: local officials

KYIV: Russian strikes late Sunday on the northeast city of Kharkiv wounded nine people and cut power to part of the city, local officials and police said.
The latest barrage came as Ukrainian officials prepare for a new wave of bombardments they think will target the country’s energy network ahead of winter, as Moscow has done the last two years.
Russia has targeted the country’s power supplies to make the harsh winter harder to endure for the country’s civilian population in an effort to put more pressure on the authorities.
Police said in a statement on Telegram that Russia had launched strikes at around 10:00 p.m. (1900 GMT) injuring four women and five men.
Among the buildings hit were residential buildings, garages, service stations, houses and cars, the statement added.
Medical services were mobilized to help the injured, but the strikes cut power to parts of the city, said police.
Governor of the region and city mayor Oleg Synegubov confirmed in a Telegram post that part of the city was without power.
Neither he, nor the police, said how much of the city had been affected by the power cuts, nor which part of the power network had been hit.
Kharkiv, the main city of the northeast region of the same name, is a regular target of Russian strikes. It lies less than 30 kilometers (19 miles) from the Russian border.
In May, Russia’s army tried to push forward in this border region, officially to create a buffer zone to limit Ukrainian attacks against military and industrial targets on Russian soil.
But the offensive has not succeeded in stopping Kyiv from targeting Russian territory on a daily basis.
 


Over 230 migrants rescued from boat off Spain’s Canary Islands

Updated 20 October 2024
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Over 230 migrants rescued from boat off Spain’s Canary Islands

  • Some 32,878 migrants have taken the perilous route in boats from West Africa to the Canary Islands between January and Oct. 15, according to government figures, a rise of 39.7 percent from the same period last year

GRAN CANARIA, Spain: Over 230 migrants were rescued from one flimsy boat on Sunday in seas off Spain’s Canary Islands, coast guards said.
Fourteen women and three children were found in the same boat which contained a total of 231 people, rescuers said.
It is the largest number of people to be rescued from the same boat off the island of Gran Canaria this year, Spanish coast guards told Reuters.
Spanish coast guards towed the wooden boat when they found the migrants close to Gran Canaria’s main port.
Some 32,878 migrants have taken the perilous route in boats from West Africa to the Canary Islands between January and Oct. 15, according to government figures, a rise of 39.7 percent from the same period last year.
The Atlantic route to the Canary Islands has seen the fastest growth in irregular migration in recent years, though numbers remain below those on the Central Mediterranean route toward Italy.

 


Gunmen in Indian-administered Kashmir kill two workers — government

Updated 20 October 2024
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Gunmen in Indian-administered Kashmir kill two workers — government

  • Muslim-majority Kashmir has been divided between rivals India, Pakistan
  • The disputed Himalayan territory is home to a long-running insurgency

NEW DELHI: Gunmen in Indian-administered Kashmir killed two laborers and wounded at least two others, the contested territory’s chief minister said Sunday, condemning a “dastardly and cowardly attack.”
Muslim-majority Kashmir has been divided between rivals India and Pakistan since their independence from British rule in 1947, and is home to a long-running insurgency.
Attackers targeted Indian workers from outside the Himalayan region.
Omar Abdullah, who was sworn in as the region’s chief minister on Wednesday after its first local elections for a decade, condemned the attack.
“Very sad news of a dastardly and cowardly attack on non-local laborers at Gagangir in Sonamarg region,” Abdullah said in a statement.
“I strongly condemn this attack on unarmed innocent people,” he said, adding that “two have been killed, and two to three more have been injured.”
Nitin Gadkari, India’s minister of roads, condemned the “horrific terror attack on innocent laborers” working on a “vital infrastructure project.”
At least 500,000 Indian troops are deployed in Kashmir, battling an insurgency with tens of thousands of civilians, soldiers and rebels killed since 1989.
India regularly accuses Pakistan of supporting and arming the rebels, a charge Islamabad denies.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government canceled Kashmir’s limited autonomy in 2019, accompanied by mass arrests and a months-long communications blackout.
His administration says the decision has allowed it to stem the insurgency, but critics have accused it of suppressing political freedoms.


Middle East unrest may lead to Islamist terror resurgence, ex-MI6 chief warns

Updated 20 October 2024
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Middle East unrest may lead to Islamist terror resurgence, ex-MI6 chief warns

  • Sir John Sawers says anger mounting over Palestinian question, ‘everyday violence’ in Gaza
  • PLC member Mustafa Barghouti says Sinwar ‘not a terrorist’

LONDON: The killing of Yahya Sinwar and wider unrest in the Middle East may lead to a resurgence in Islamist terrorism, a former MI6 chief has said.

Sir John Sawers, the former head of the UK’s foreign intelligence service, was speaking to Sky News days after the Hamas leader was killed.

Mounting anger over the Palestinian issue and the proliferation of violent, distressing footage captured in Gaza could see Islamist movements turn their attention beyond the Middle East, he told the channel.

“(Islamist) terrorism may actually get a further boost, if that’s the right word, from events in the Middle East — the frustrations that we’ll be seeing because of the lack of movement on the Palestinian question, because of the violence people are witnessing every day,” Sawers said.

Israel is waging military campaigns against Hamas in the Occupied Palestinian Territories and Hezbollah in Lebanon.

The two organizations have decades-old overseas funding and finance networks but could soon “revert back to international terrorism,” Sawer said.

“And it could be that Hezbollah and Hamas, the new leaderships there are focused so much on violence that they’ve become not just terrorist organizations designated by Western countries and aimed against Israel, but they could revert back to international terrorism, including here in the UK.”

Intelligence agencies in Europe and North America should “be very much on their toes,” Sawer added.

“So, I think MI5, the police, the other intelligence agencies like my former one, MI6, they need to be very much on their toes, to watch out for a further rise in Islamic terrorism.”

Mustafa Barghouti, a member of the Palestinian Legislative Council, appeared on the Sky News show, describing Sinwar as a “person who fought for his country and who fought for his people, and not as a terrorist.”

The Oct. 7 Hamas-led attack, which Sinwar had organized, was a response to decades of ethnic cleansing conducted by Israel against Palestinians, he said.

Barghouti told Sky that he had long advocated for nonviolent approaches to the Palestinian cause.

“In my opinion, the killing of Sinwar will not really help or improve the situation because Sinwar was not the obstacle to achieving a ceasefire,” he said.

He condemned Western media sources for measuring Palestinian lives as less valuable than Israelis, highlighting Israel’s killing of about 17,000 children in Gaza during the war.

“The problem with most of Western media is that you present a situation as if the killing of an innocent Israeli civilian is a terrorist act,” Barghouti said.

“While the killing of … you never say it, that the killing of 17,000 children, Palestinian children, is an act of terrorism and that the terrorist in this case is Netanyahu and his Israeli government.”