The story about the killing of a Sikh activist requires that we take the prime minister at his word, and it seems to be working.
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.The headline version: After weeks of “quiet diplomacy,” Trudeau was forced by events to say a frightfully indelicate thing out loud: The wicked and authoritarian Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi had arranged the murder of a harmless Canadian citizen in a cold-blooded assassination, outside a place of worship here in Canada, no less.
Modi had been rude to him. The Indian press had made fun of him. Trudeau missed the launch of the Global Biofuels Alliance and skipped the closing grand banquet, then found himself stuck for several hours after his CC-150 Polaris was judged incapable of flight. He then had to stew for another 24 hours waiting for a replacement Polaris to arrive from CFB Trenton after turning up his nose atThis advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
There is nothing new about any of that, except for what Trudeau introduced in the words “credible allegations of a potential link.” Canada’s security agencies have been clear from the beginning that they are investigating Khalistani activists’ claims that “Indian agents” may have been somehow involved in the gangland-style hit. Trudeau is now saying their claims are credible. That’s what’s new, and “potential link” offers Trudeau a great deal of wiggle room. So does the term “Indian agents.
In that same Khalistani cult there is also an open adulation of Talwinder Singh Parmar, the mastermind behind the 1985 Air India bombing, as a “saint.” Nijjar’s face now appears along with Parmar’s in Khalistani billboards and posters from Brampton, Ont. to Burnaby, B.C., and on “Sikhs For Justice” leaflets offering a $10,000 reward for the home addresses of India’s High Commissioner in Canada and the addresses of his consuls-general.
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Trudeau seeks India's help on probe of B.C. killing, India says Canada gave no infoOTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is calling for India's help to investigate the killing of a Sikh independence activist on Canadian soil, while New Delhi says Canada has provided no information on the case.
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Trudeau seeks India's help on probe of B.C. killing, India says Canada gave no infoOTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is calling for India's help to investigate the killing of a Sikh independence activist on Canadian soil, while New Delhi says Canada has provided no information on the case.
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