September 23, 2023
2 mins read

How Khalistan is Forcing Trudeau’s Hand on India Row

Trudeau’s Liberal Party depends on the Jagmeet Singh-led New Democratic Party, which has 24 MPs, for survival.

In political and Indo-Canadian circles here, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s allegations in the House of Commons on Monday that India was possibly involved in the gunning down of Khalistani activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar are also viewed as his compulsion for his political survival.

Trudeau’s Liberal Party, which with its 157 seats fell short of the majority mark in the 338-member House of Commons in last year’s snap elections, depends on the Jagmeet Singh-led New Democratic Party, which has 24 MPs, for survival.

“Jagmeet, who is a known supporter of Khalistanis and who captured leadership of the NDP by recruiting a huge membership from his supporters, set terms for Trudeau for his support, including more spending on healthcare, free dental care for middle and low-income Canadians, housing support for poor, etc,” said a top Indo-Canadian politician in Vancouver, refusing to be named.

“Just as Khalistanis helped Jagmeet capture the leadership of the New Democratic Party, they also played a major role in Trudeau’s winning the leadership of the Liberal Party. Since both these leaders are in bed with Khalistanis, they are exploiting the alleged intelligence linking India to the murder of Nijjar,” said the Indo-Canadian politician.

After Trudeau’s allegations against India on Monday, Jagmeet Singh had spoken in Punjabi to appeal to his core constituency, promising to get to the bottom of the truth behind Nijjar’s murder.

“Jagmeet is now exacting his pound of flesh from Trudeau, forcing the Prime Minister to up the ante on India’s alleged involvement in the killing of Nijjar. I don’t know where this India-Canada row will end now,” said a Brampton journalist, requesting anonymity.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi in a conversation with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at the G7 Summit in Biarritz, France on Aug 25, 2019. (Photo: IANS/MEA)

Many in the 1.8-millon strong Indo-Canadian community contend that the Indian row is not going to politically benefit either Trudeau or Jagmeet.

“The entire 800,000-strong Hindu community in Canada, which was previously divided in their political loyalties, will now most likely vote for the opposition Conservative Party in the next elections due in 2025. A high percentage of Sikh voters, who are now worried, will also ditch Trudeau’s party. We will have to wait till 2025 before our bilateral ties can possibly improve,” said the Brampton journalist.

ALSO READ: Trudeau puts India, Canada ties on thin ice

Previous Story

Senator Bob Menendez Charged With Bribery

Next Story

US to Provide Ukraine With ‘Long-Range Missiles’

Latest from -Top News

Arab world blasts Israel’s annexation bid

Arab and Muslim nations unite to denounce Israel’s West Bank annexation bills, citing international law and ICJ rulings, as Israel freezes legislation amid global diplomatic pressure. A broad coalition of Arab and

US pressures Israel on West Bank

Arab and Muslim countries, which the US has been courting to provide troops and money for a stabilization force in Gaza have warned that annexation of the West Bank is a red

UK and ASEAN launch Green Transition Fund

UK deepens energy cooperation with ASEAN through launch of Clean and Just Energy Transition Pillar under the Green Transition Fund…reports Asian Lite News The United Kingdom has strengthened its partnership with Southeast

Plans for Heathrow expansion accelerate

Government launches formal review to fast-track Heathrow’s third runway, pledging private financing, green safeguards and a final planning decision within this Parliament…reports Asian Lite News The government has taken a major step
Go toTop

Don't Miss

‘Khalistan’ staging a comeback?

Khalistan had become a thing of the past after India

Ahead of Republic Day, SFJ Launches Khalistan Referendum Registration in India

Pannun declared that the 26th of January will be the