Canada expelled six Indian diplomats after police said they collected evidence those officials were part of an Indian government “campaign of violence,” a government source told Reuters on Monday.
The Washington Post earlier reported the diplomats had been expelled. India withdrew its envoy to Canada on Monday along with other officials and diplomats whom Ottawa named as persons of interest in a matter related to an investigation in the country, the Indian foreign ministry said.
New Delhi rejected the “preposterous imputations” of the Canadian assertion, made in a diplomatic communication on Sunday, saying it was part of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s “political agenda” centered around “vote bank politics.”
The foreign ministry also said it summoned the Canadian chargé d’affaires on Monday and informed him that the “baseless targeting” of Indian diplomats and officials in Canada was “completely unacceptable.”
“We have no faith in the current Canadian Government’s commitment to ensure their security. Therefore, the Government of India has decided to withdraw the High Commissioner and other targeted diplomats and officials,” it said in a statement.
India also conveyed that it “reserves” the right to take further steps in response to the Canadian government’s “support for extremism, violence and separatism against India,” the statement said.
Relations between New Delhi and Ottawa have been frosty since September 2023, when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Canada was “pursuing credible allegations of a potential link” between Indian agents and the killing of a Canadian Sikh separatist leader that year, prompting a strong reaction from New Delhi, which denied the allegation.
India has repeatedly said Canada has not shared any evidence to back its claim.
“This latest step follows interactions that have again witnessed assertions without any facts. This leaves little doubt that on the pretext of an investigation, there is a deliberate strategy of smearing India for political gains,” it said.
“India now reserves the right to take further steps in response to these latest efforts of the Canadian Government to concoct allegations against Indian diplomats.”
It also alleged that the Trudeau government “has consciously provided space to violent extremists and terrorists to harass, threaten and intimidate Indian diplomats and community leaders in Canada.”
Canada pulled out more than 40 diplomats from India in October 2023 after New Delhi asked Ottawa to reduce its diplomatic presence.
In June, a committee of Canadian parliamentarians had named India and China as the main foreign threats to its democratic institutions, based on input from intelligence agencies.
India’s envoy in Ottawa, Sanjay Kumar Verma, called the report politically motivated and influenced by Sikh separatist campaigners.
Earlier this year, Trudeau said that he hoped India would “engage with us so that we can get to the bottom of this very serious matter.”
Soon after Canada’s allegation, the U.S. claimed that Indian agents were involved in an attempted assassination plot of another Sikh separatist leader in New York in 2023, and said it had indicted an Indian national who was working at the behest of an unnamed Indian government official.
Unlike its angry response to Canadian allegations, however, India expressed concern after the U.S. raised the issue, dissociating itself from the plot, and has launched an investigation.
The assassination plots against Sikh separatist leaders in Canada and the U.S. have tested their relationship with India, as the Western nations hope to forge deeper ties with New Delhi to counter China’s rising global influence.
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