storresbusquets commited on
Commit
2fddd09
1 Parent(s): 469e5ec

Create texts/India_Canada.txt

Browse files
Files changed (1) hide show
  1. texts/India_Canada.txt +15 -0
texts/India_Canada.txt ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,15 @@
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
+ Relations between India and Canada have been rocky for some time. But this week, they hit new lows.
2
+
3
+ After Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Monday accused India of assassinating a Canadian Sikh in British Columbia, India angrily denied the charges. Both countries are up in arms, and the diplomatic row shows no sign of easing anytime soon.
4
+
5
+ We asked a pair of commentators, Barkha Dutt from India and David Moscrop from Canada, to give us a sense of the mood in their respective countries. — Damir Marusic
6
+
7
+ Barkha Dutt: India and Canada stand at the precipice of a breakdown in relations. Trudeau has only himself to blame.
8
+
9
+ The Canadian prime minister’s habit of turning a blind eye toward extremism in his country — secessionists who violently advocate for Khalistan, a separate homeland for Sikhs — has made him the most disliked world leader in India.
10
+
11
+ His claim that Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Indian government is behind the murder of one such person — Hardeep Singh Nijjar, the leader of the self-proclaimed Khalistan Tiger Force, and a designated terrorist in India — has cemented his poor reputation.
12
+
13
+ Nijjar was wanted for multiple crimes in India. In 2016, Indian authorities filed a red notice with Interpol for his arrest. On June 18, he was fatally shot in the parking lot of a Sikh temple by unidentified assailants. At the time, some Canadian journalists pointed to internecine battles within Khalistani groups. “It has all the makings of a gangland hit,” Terry Milewski, an expert on the global Khalistan network, told me.
14
+
15
+ Now, almost four months later, Trudeau is declaring Nijjar’s death an assassination. To Indians, the timing is as suspect as the claim.