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Positive momentum expected following reset in India-Canada ties: Experts
Positive momentum expected following reset in India-Canada ties: Experts

Hindustan Times

time18-06-2025

  • Business
  • Hindustan Times

Positive momentum expected following reset in India-Canada ties: Experts

Kananaskis, Canada: Those engaged in the India-Canada corridor are hopeful that another inflection point has been arrived at, a positive one this time after a productive bilateral meeting between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Canadian counterpart and host Mark Carney on Tuesday on the margins of the G7 leaders' summit in Kananaskis. 'India and Canada have following a pragmatic script this year towards normalising the broken political relationship. On the margins of the G7 Summit, the two PMs pressed the reset button, in essence allowing robust economic ties to drive the political ones,' Ajay Bisaria, former Indian High Commissioner to Ottawa felt. Among the issues addressed was filling the vacant posts of High Commissioners in the two capitals and Bisaria said that 'should enable a step-by-step move towards stabilisation of ties and then perhaps building back a better strategic partnership, guided by economic and geopolitical interests and future- proofed against security shocks'. Also enthusiastic about the positivity flowing from the meeting was Goldy Hyder, president and CEO of the Business Council of Canada. He said, 'It's a very good day. Exactly the right steps to reset and restore constructive bilateral relations.' Vina Nadjibulla, vice-president research and strategy at the Asia-Pacific Foundation of Canada, said, 'Good to have a clear signal from the two leaders to reset the relationship and deepen cooperation at a time when both countries are hoping to diversify economic and strategic partnerships.' She said the meeting and its outcome represented 'a significant moment' which sets the stage for follow up action at the level of officials and ministers. She described it as 'positive on substance and symbolism', marking 'remarkable progress' that 'would have been hard to imagine even a few months ago.' Ritesh Malik, chair of the Canada-India Foundation also welcomed the outcome, as he said 'this could be the big reset moment on many important unresolved issues'. 'Commitment to mutual respect, territorial integrity and sovereignty is just the foundation on which this relationship can only grow leaps and bounds,' he added.

Next government in Canada must make the case to re-engage with India: Ex-diplomat
Next government in Canada must make the case to re-engage with India: Ex-diplomat

Hindustan Times

time27-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Hindustan Times

Next government in Canada must make the case to re-engage with India: Ex-diplomat

Toronto: A retired Canadian diplomat, who once served in New Delhi, has said that the next government in Ottawa must make the case to re-engage with India. David McKinnon, senior fellow with the Asia-Pacific Foundation of Canada, served as High Commissioner to Sri Lanka and the Maldives from 2017 to 2022 and before that as Minister-Counsellor at Canada's High Commission in New Delhi from 2004 to 2009. In a dispatch for the Foundation, he argued 'whoever forms the Canadian government after the April 28 election must make the case for Canada to re-engage — effectively and pragmatically — with India.' 'India is far too important to our economic and security future to ignore,' he added. He pointed out that India was now the world's fifth largest economy, and while 20 years back, it was smaller than Canada's, it's now twice as large. 'Our engagement must reflect this reality — grounded in understanding and co-operation where possible, while not shying away from honest, respectful, and constructive dialogue about our differences,' he noted. The referred to the collapse in relations between the two countries following the statement from then Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in the House of Commons on September 18, 2023, there were 'credible allegations' of a potential link between Indian agents and the killing of pro-Khalistan figure Hardeep Singh Nijjar in Surrey, British Columbia, three months earlier. However, he said, 'While the Nijjar case cannot be ignored, this episode — however serious — should not dictate the entirety of our policy.' He called on Ottawa to 'stay focused on the bigger picture: an unstable, rapidly evolving global order where economic and security partnerships are more essential than ever'. 'Letting investigations and court proceedings unfold without unnecessary political interference is key to restoring dialogue and finding a potential way out — just as it was in a related case in the United States,' he said. That reference was to the high-level inquiry instituted by India in 2023 to probe the alleged attempt to kill Nijjar's friend and Sikhs for Justice general-counsel Gurpatwant Pannun. 'India deserves a more thoughtful and strategic approach,' he stated. He added Canada's understanding of India 'has not reflected its strategic importance' as few policy thinkers and leaders 'have more than limited appreciation of the world's largest country, its complexities'. 'This has allowed the relationship to become a tool of domestic politics rather than one of strategic engagement rooted in Canada's national interest,' he said. 'As Canadians grow increasingly concerned about a more assertive China under President Xi Jinping and an unreliable US under (President Donald) Trump, the question is no longer whether we need a serious, strategic relationship with India — but how,' he concluded.

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