Murder of Sikh leader sparks duelling protests in Toronto

Sikhs in a rally for the independence of a state they hope to call Khalistan, in front of the Indian consulate in Toronto, Canada, on July 8. PHOTO: AFP

TORONTO – A few hundred members of Canada’s Sikh community demonstrated outside the Indian consulate in Toronto on Saturday to protest against the unsolved murder of one of their leaders in the Vancouver area in June.

They accused the Indian government of being responsible for the gunning down of Mr Hardeep Singh Nijjar, president of a Sikh temple and campaigner for the creation of an independent Sikh state that supporters hope to call Khalistan.

“When an Indian agency and system commit a crime, they have to be held accountable,” Mr Kuljeet Singh, spokesman for Sikhs for Justice, a US-based organisation behind the rally, told AFP.

Mr Nijjar, whom India had declared a wanted terrorist, was gunned down on June 18 in Surrey, a suburb of Vancouver that is home to one of the largest Sikh populations in Canada.

Another protester, Mr Hakirt Singh, a lawyer, told AFP that the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) “should investigate this murder” as a political assassination.

“When there is vandalism against a Member of Parliament, you see tweets and reactions from politicians. Here is an assassination of a Canadian citizen on Canadian soil. That is foreign interference.”

Mr Nijjar had advocated for the creation of an independent Sikh state to be carved out of parts of northern India and perhaps part of Pakistan.

India accused him of carrying out terrorist attacks in India, a charge he denied.

The demonstrators, almost exclusively men, carried yellow flags with blue logos representing their separatist movement and shouted: “Khalistan! Khalistan!”

Setting off from the Toronto suburbs, they arrived in front of the Indian consulate, where they were met by about 50 members of the diaspora in support of the Indian government.

“They have a poster here calling to kill Indian diplomats. We are concerned because these groups have committed terrorist acts in the past and politicians are not taking action,” one of the counter-demonstrators, Mr Vijay Jain, an information technology consultant, told AFP.

A line of 20 policemen intervened to separate the two groups, and one Sikh protester was taken away after forcing down a barrier and running to the other side.

Canadian police arresting a Sikh protester during a demonstration in front of the Indian Consulate in Toronto on July 8. PHOTO: AFP

Since the murder of the Sikh leader, tensions have risen between Canada and India.

New Delhi regularly accuses Ottawa of laxity in its handling of Sikh protesters in Canada.

“We have asked the Canadian government to take all necessary measures to ensure the safety of our diplomats,” Mr Arindam Bagchi, spokesman for India’s Foreign Ministry, said on Thursday.

Canada is home to the largest number of Sikhs outside their home state of Punjab, India. AFP

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