logo
‘Small group' of Khalistanis in Canada fund violence in India

‘Small group' of Khalistanis in Canada fund violence in India

Russia Today20-06-2025
A small number of Khalistani separatists in Canada continue to use the country as a base to fund political violence in India, the Canadian Security and Intelligence Service (CSIS) has said in a report.
Khalistanis, or Sikh separatists, seek to carve out an ethno-religious country from the Indian state of Punjab. The movement for a nation of Khalistan reached its peak in India in the 1980s and has few backers in the country now. However, members of the Sikh diaspora have been trying to revive the movement in Canada.
India and Canada disagree on the degree of the threat posed by Khalistani activists. 'Some Canadians participate in legitimate and peaceful campaigning to support the Khalistan movement,' the CSIS said in its report. 'Non-violent advocacy for an independent state of Khalistan is not considered extremism.'
The Canadian intelligence report added: 'Only a small group of individuals are considered Khalistani extremists because they continue to use Canada as a base for the promotion, fundraising or planning of violence primarily in India.'
The report reaffirmed allegations of an Indian government connection in the killing of prominent Khalistan figure Hardeep Singh Nijjar. The agency claimed that India, along with Russia, China, Pakistan and Iran, are the 'main perpetrators of foreign interference and espionage' against Canada.
The report, which was presented in the Canadian Parliament last week, nearly coincided with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's talks with his Canadian counterpart, Mark Carney, at the G7 Summit in Kananaskis, where they agreed to improve diplomatic ties. Canada-India relations began to deteriorate after the 2023 G20 summit in New Delhi, where then-Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Modi only held informal talks, exchanging concerns over 'anti-India activities' in the North American nation.
Ties between the countries reached a low in October 2024 when Canadian officials accused Indian diplomats of targeting Sikh activists in Canada, leading to the mutual expulsion of diplomats. The CSIS report noted that in October 2024, Canadian investigators found evidence that linked agents of the Indian government and criminal networks to sow violent activity in South Asian communities in Canada.
'Further, links between the Indian government and the Nijjar murder signals a significant escalation in India's repression efforts against the Khalistan movement and a clear intent to target individuals in North America,' the report added.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump to ‘take a look' at deporting Elon Musk
Trump to ‘take a look' at deporting Elon Musk

Russia Today

time5 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Trump to ‘take a look' at deporting Elon Musk

US President Donald Trump has said that he might entertain the idea of deporting Elon Musk and could consider getting the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) to look into the billionaire's government contracts. The president's comments come amid a very public falling out between him and Musk, who was until recently one of Trump's staunchest supporters. Last month, Musk stepped down as the head of DOGE after heavily criticizing Trump's 'big, beautiful' budget bill, which includes a $5 trillion debt ceiling increase. Speaking to reporters on Tuesday, Trump was asked if he would look at deporting Elon Musk – a naturalized US citizen – to his native South Africa, to which the president replied: 'I don't know, we'll have to take a look.' 'We might have to put DOGE on Elon,' the president added, noting that 'DOGE is the monster that might have to go back and eat Elon.' Trump further pointed out that Musk had been getting a 'lot of subsidies.' 'Elon's very upset that the [Electrical Vehicle] mandate is going to be terminated,' Trump said, stating that 'not everybody wants an electric car.' Earlier, Trump also posted on his Truth Social platform that Musk 'knew, long before he so strongly endorsed me for president, that I was strongly against the EV Mandate.' The president said that electric cars are 'fine' but objected to having everyone forced to own one. Trump suggested in his post that without subsidies, Musk could end up having to 'close up shop and head back home to South Africa.' This, according to Trump, could save the US 'a fortune,' as Musk would no longer be engaged in any rocket launches, satellites, or electric car production. 'Perhaps we should have DOGE take a good, hard, look at this? BIG MONEY TO BE SAVED!!!' Trump wrote. Meanwhile, Musk has continued to attack Trump's budget bill, claiming that it undermines his work with DOGE to cut federal spending. 'Every member of Congress who campaigned on reducing government spending and then immediately voted for the biggest debt increase in history should hang their head in shame,' Musk wrote on X on Tuesday. 'They will lose their primary next year if it is the last thing I do on this Earth,' he warned. Musk also reiterated calls to establish a new 'America Party' to serve as an alternative to the 'Democrat-Republican uniparty so that the people actually have a voice.'

Nearly half of Americans believe US won't be a superpower within a decade
Nearly half of Americans believe US won't be a superpower within a decade

Russia Today

timea day ago

  • Russia Today

Nearly half of Americans believe US won't be a superpower within a decade

A significant share of American adults believe the United States may face severe crises within the next decade and lose its status as a global superpower, according to a recent YouGov survey. Of the 1,111 adults polled online in mid-June, 21% said it is very likely the US will see its global position decline in the next 10 years. Another 24% said such a scenario is somewhat likely. In total, 45% of respondents said a complete economic collapse is at least somewhat plausible. Forty percent said they foresee a civil war, while the same proportion believed there would be a total breakdown of law and order. Nearly as many (38%) said they believe the US may no longer be a democracy in 10 years. Thirty-one percent said the country could become a fascist dictatorship, while 20% predicted a communist dictatorship. Only 43% of respondents said the current US political system is working at least somewhat well, though opinions varied sharply along partisan lines. Among Democrats, 26% said the system functions adequately, compared to 69% of Republicans and 36% of independents. While most Americans said they believe they live in a democracy regardless of political affiliation, a majority also believe the country is experiencing a constitutional crisis. That view was shared by 56% of respondents, including 82% of Democrats and 26% of Republicans. Forty-seven percent of Democrats said they are very scared about the direction of global affairs, compared to 10% of Republicans and 30% of independents. Compared to a decade ago, 67% of those polled said they see more political violence and misinformation in the US, with at least half believing those issues are more severe in the US than in other democracies.

Kennedy labels US Democrats ‘war party'
Kennedy labels US Democrats ‘war party'

Russia Today

timea day ago

  • Russia Today

Kennedy labels US Democrats ‘war party'

US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has accused the Democratic Party of abandoning its traditional values and transforming into a pro-war, pro-censorship force defined largely by opposition to President Donald Trump. In a wide-ranging interview with conservative talk show host Tucker Carlson published Monday, Kennedy said the Democratic Party now instinctively reverses positions as soon as Trump adopts them. 'The Democrats were the anti-war party,' Kennedy said. 'But as soon as [Trump] expressed his opposition to the Ukraine war, they became the war party.' 'They were the party of free speech,' he continued. 'When President Trump started advocating for free speech… the Democrats became openly for censorship.' Kennedy, a longtime Democrat who briefly ran as an independent candidate in 2024 before supporting Trump and joining his cabinet in early 2025, said he continues to champion the same principles but now faces opposition from former allies. Twenty years ago, Bobby Kennedy was exiled from polite society for suggesting a link between autism and vaccines. Now he's a cabinet secretary, and still saying it.(0:00) The Organized Opposition to RFK's Mission(6:46) Uncovering the Reason for Skyrocketing Rates of Autism… 'These were people I was friends with my whole life and I have not changed… but the party has just a knee-jerk reaction against anything that is Trump,' he told Carlson. Kennedy added that Democrats, once critical of the CIA and trade deals like the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), shifted to support both once Trump voiced criticism. He also accused the party of undermining women's sports, noting that his uncle, Senator Edward Kennedy, had helped write Title IX, a US federal civil rights law that prohibits sex-based discrimination. 'You can go on and on with those examples, but President Trump is literally dictating the platform of the Democratic Party. Anything that he says, they're going to be against,' he said, noting that this pattern reflects a deeper problem in American politics. 'You know that partisanship by its nature is dishonest and it is the enemy of democracy,' RFK Jr. warned. 'And in George Washington's farewell speech, he said that he was very frightened about the rise of the political party because they would become self-interested rather than patriotic.' Kennedy, the founder of the anti-vaccine group Children's Health Defense, has gained prominence in the US for questioning the safety and effectiveness of childhood inoculations and promoting the claim that they are linked to autism –a theory widely rejected by the scientific community. He was also a vocal critic of the World Health Organization's Covid-19 response measures, including lockdowns and the rapid rollout of experimental vaccines. Despite his controversial reputation, Kennedy denies being opposed to immunization, noting that his own children have been vaccinated. He has repeatedly stated that he advocates for stricter safety testing and more rigorous studies. After Kennedy endorsed Trump, the president vowed to give him broad authority over healthcare policy, saying he would let Kennedy 'go wild.' Kennedy said most opposition to his policies as Health Secretary comes not from industry experts but from media and political operatives. 'I get opposition from proxies to the industry. Yes. And I think the major opposition that I feel is from the mainstream media and from Democrats,' he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store