Justin Trudeau’s muted approach to Chinese interference

In a world where political games are played in the shadows and where the echelons of power are masked by veils of duplicity, the recent public announcement by Canadian Prime Minister Trudeau about allegations of Indian involvement in the assassination of Hardeep Singh Nijjar has rattled many. But, one must ask, why is Canada so vociferous about India while seemingly turning a blind eye to China’s mischief?

India’s media covers Trudeau better than Canadian media.

Share

Trudeau’s fumble on India

It is hard to imagine any world leader wanting to share the foreign policy swamp in which the beleaguered Canadian Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, currently finds himself.

Having spent the past months fighting accusations that he acted too slowly to address serious allegations that China attempted to meddle in Canada’s 2019 and 2021 elections, Trudeau’s has landed in a potentially costly diplomatic dog fight with the world’s most populous democracy, India, at exactly the time he needs Delhi the most.

Put simply, the timing couldn’t be worse.

Share

Sikh group urges protests outside Indian embassies in Canada over Nijjar murder

A Canadian Sikh group has called on its members to protest outside the Indian diplomatic missions of main Canadian cities on Monday, a week after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau raised the prospect of New Delhi’s involvement in the murder of a Sikh separatist leader in British Columbia.

Trudeau said last week Canada was pursuing “credible allegations” that Indian government agents may be linked to the killing of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, who was shot dead outside a Sikh temple on June 18 in Surrey, a Vancouver suburb with a high Sikh population.

Share

Russia blasts Canada over ‘outrageous’ war veteran reception in Parliament

The Kremlin said on Monday it was “outrageous” that a Ukrainian man who served in one of Adolf Hitler’s Waffen SS units during the Second World War had been presented to Canada’s Parliament last week as a hero.

Yaroslav Hunka, 98, received two standing ovations from Canadian lawmakers during a visit by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. The speaker of Canada’s Parliament has since apologized to Jewish groups for the incident.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said the episode showed a careless disregard for historical truth, and that the memory of Nazi crimes must be preserved.

Share

Unease grows in Punjab as Canada-India tensions deepen

Steps from the old quarter of Amritsar, the holiest city for the Sikh community, 62-year- old Ashok Kumar tended his newspaper stand, with the dailies perched precariously on the seat of a scooter, and sighed. The headlines are dominated by the news — in English and Punjabi — of the bitter diplomatic fight between India and Canada, and Kumar doesn’t like it.

“This shouldn’t be happening,” said Kumar, especially with what he called “baseless speculation” from Canada’s prime minister, Justin Trudeau.

Share

Sikh groups ask Canadian political parties to present ‘united front’ against India

Two groups in the Canadian Sikh diaspora are calling for Canada’s political parties to “present a united front” on India after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced a “potential link” between the shooting death of a local leader and the Indian government.

In a joint statement, the Ontario Gurdwaras Committee and the British Columbia Gurdwaras Council say that “Canadian parties of all stripes must be unequivocally clear” about their opposition to possible foreign interference relating to the death of Hardeep Singh Nijjar in June.


The Liberals and NDP already do present a united front against India, that’s the problem.

How about asking for a united front against foreign terrorists using Canada as a safe haven? Or is that racist?

Gangland Canada: Trudeau’s backyard global hub of 8 Indian crime lords

The killing of Sukhdool Singh Gill aka Sukha Duneke in Winnipeg, Canada, on Wednesday has thrown the spotlight on the global operations of notorious Indian criminal gangs.

Duneke, who was allegedly associated with the infamous Bambiha gang, was wanted in multiple cases in India, including for murder, extortion, and attempt to murder.

Share

Trudeau facing cold reality after lonely week on world stage

This week in New York, as he listened to questions from reporters, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s reliable smile began to fade.

Unsurprisingly, nearly all the questions were about India and the shocking allegation made by Mr Trudeau earlier in the week: there was credible evidence the Indian government had participated in the extrajudicial killing of a Canadian citizen on Canadian soil, a Sikh activist whom India has accused of terrorism.

Delhi has denied having anything to do with the murder.

Share

Death threats, Jordan Peterson and me: Charlie Angus Speaks Of His Harrowing Experience

Death threats, Jordan Peterson and me: My journey into the world of Pitchfork Politics

I recently crossed a Rubicon in my political career. For the first time in 23 years of public service, I asked the OPP to come to my office to help answer the phones. My phone was ringing off the hook with threats of violence against me, my staff and my family. The messages came from a wide variety of people who were deep in the rage hole of anti-vax and world government conspiracy. The threat of violence was explicit.

Welcome to Canadian political life in 2023. And it’s not just politicians who face the threat. The intimidation is being used to target all manner of public figures. This violent intimidation is on rise because right-wing extremists know they can get away with it.

Share

U.S. Provided Canada With Intelligence on Killing of Sikh Leader

American spy agencies provided information to Ottawa after the killing of a Sikh separatist leader in the Vancouver area, but Canada developed the most definitive intelligence that led it to accuse India of orchestrating the plot, according to Western allied officials.

In the aftermath of the killing, U.S. intelligence agencies offered their Canadian counterparts context that helped Canada conclude that India had been involved. Yet what appears to be the “smoking gun,” intercepted communications of Indian diplomats in Canada indicating involvement in the plot, was gathered by Canadian officials, allied officials said.

Share

Why foreign powers find it so easy to harass their exiles in Canada

TORONTO — When Mehmet Tohti heard Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announce that authorities were pursuing “credible allegations” that agents of the Indian government were involved in the murder of a Sikh separatist on Canadian soil, he was not surprised.

Tohti, the head of the Uyghur Rights Advocacy Project in Ottawa, said Trudeau’s bombshell comments in the House of Commons on Monday have revealed to the world what Canada’s diaspora communities have long warned about: The governments of their homelands routinely harass, intimidate and threaten them — at home, school and everywhere in between.

And Canadian authorities, they and others allege, have failed to take their claims seriously, offer protection or adequately counter the threat — one intelligence agencies here have warned is growing.

Share

That’s a bad look …

Par for the course for our train wreck government. Our Deputy PM is the grand daughter of a NAZI propagandist.

Freeland giggled like a BDM schoolgirl meeting Hitler when she announced she was freezing citizen bank accounts.

About 8000 members of the 1st Ukraine Division were also settled in the UK after the war with full government knowledge. The following video has good background on why that was so.

Share

‘The new Mossad?’ Canada murder has thrown a spotlight on India’s spy network

In the spring of 1993 bomb blasts in 12 locations across Mumbai killed 257 people and injured more than a thousand. The perpetrators, members of the underworld in collaboration with Pakistani intelligence, were sheltering in Pakistan. As Mumbai reeled from the bloodshed, the leader of India’s external intelligence agency, the Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW), prepared to strike back. For years, the agency had been infiltrating trained agents into Pakistan to serve as long-term moles. The R&AW station chief, with his sophisticated network of agents, knew exactly where the militants were.

Share

Arsh Dala, The Terrorist With Killer Record Bigger Than Nijjar; Khalistan Terror In Canada

The sensational claims of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau about alleged Indian role in the killing of Khalistan terrorist Hardeep Singh Nijjar has put the spotlight on extremist activity in Canada. A dossier reportedly prepared by Indian intelligence agencies reveals that Canada is harbouring terrorists more dangerous than Nijjar. One of them is Harshdeep Singh alias Arsh Dala.

Justin just loves those Sikh votes.

Share

Trudeau’s Canada: Winnipeg homicide victim was wanted on multiple criminal charges by authorities in India

A man killed in Winnipeg’s Inkster Industrial area earlier this week was wanted by authorities in India, according to a specialized counter-terrorism law enforcement agency in that country.

Officers were called to a home on Hazelton Drive in northwest Winnipeg around 10 a.m. Wednesday and found a man dead inside, police said Thursday.

They later identified the man as Sukhdool Singh Gill, 39, and said his family has been notified.

Career criminals and terrorists seem to jump to the head of the immigration line in Trudeau’s Canada.

Share