India Canada Relations

Cheen is allowed to pet the poodle but the poodle's master still remains US deep state.
I doubt we will be afforded the privelege of petting.

Also unlike say Australia and coal, mineral imports we don't even have a chance of some heavy trade leverage on Canucks, do we?

Like we are bipartisan bum-chums with Aussie because of coal and minerals importation, only the local MI6 branch there barks at us, the Govts remain politically correct and friendly
thats not how poodles work. if you bribe the poodle and be nice to it for 10 minutes, you become the poodle's ' fill in babysitter'. it will treat you as master junior. it will still go back to its master, but you become a ' mini-dad' like the big bro told to babysit little bro. That is canada. China is the big bro, but murrica is still the daddy. and when daddy is being mean or daddy is distractd, the poodle will seek out the big bro for comfort. that is the dynamic at play here :)

Canada is also quite resource-heavy. obviously much further away so not as competitive as aussie, but its the same guy but much further away, with the potential to become a global superpower one day (IF climate change happens in its worst case scenario, Russia and Canada become the new Americas, India and China become nigeria).
This is why indian colonization to Canada is very critical for our survival in terms of hedging our bets.
Because Aussie may be closer, but Aussie is basically a less sandy but even drier Saudi Arabia. Not enough water to transplant entire India. However, Canada DOES have shit tons of fertile and and largest freshwater reserve on the planet - and IF Greta Annoyingberg is correct, once a lot of that fertile land becomes ice free and gets 6-8 months growing season, Canada suddenly becomes the new 'place to be'.
 
By the way, most of the news re: India-Canada/Hindu-Sikh that i see here are CBC and the Sun group papers.
Sun groups ( Vancouver Sun, Toronto Sun, Calgary Herald, etc) are ALL libbu leftie media and CBC is literally a more govt. controlled version of doordarshan. it WILL peddle watever the govt of canada is peddling.

However, there is another reputed group, the conservative ones ( toronto star is one of those papers) where Globe & mail is basically the more sane conservative version of fox news and G&M is to Pierre Polievre what Fox News is to Trump.
Now, obviously G&M isnt gonna reflect same language and tone as Swarajya or something RW indian on the issue and they wont throw the khalistanis under the bus completely, but notice the much much more balanced reporting and subtle change of tone in its reporting :
=====================================================================

Fears of more clashes between Sikhs and Hindus in Brampton, Ont., as Canada-India rift spills over into suburbs​

Greg Mercer, Jill Mahoney and Colin Freeze
Brampton, ont., mississauga, ont. and toronto
Published Yesterday
Open this photo in gallery:

Members of the Sikh community patrol the Sri Guru Singh Sabha Malton Gurdwara in Mississauga, Ont., with bats, clubs, sticks, swords and other defence weapons after the community was subject to a slew of violence from pro-India activists on Nov. 5.Christopher Katsarov/The Globe and Mail
79


Listen to this article

Young men clutching swords, baseball bats and pieces of lumber are standing guard outside a Sikh gurdwara near Toronto’s Pearson Airport, their eyes scanning the perimeter for signs of trouble in the dark.

Prayers broadcasting from inside the temple mix with Punjabi music blaring from a pick-up truck parked nearby. The mood has been tense ever since the sun set.

“We have to be ready,” said Daljit Singh Sekhon, president of the Sri Guru Singh Sabha Malton gurdwara in Mississauga, Ont., glancing at a bank of security cameras Tuesday.

Story continues below advertisement


Anxious scenes like this unfolded this week at temples in Brampton and nearby Mississauga as the growing rift between Canada and India spilled over into Canadian suburbs. Hindus and Sikhs, divided over a decades-long fight to carve out a sovereign nation in a northwest region of India, clashed in the streets, and some threatened a wave of sectarian violence rarely seen in this country.

The conflicts come just weeks after RCMP announced they had evidence of Indian officials’ involvement in homicides, extortion and other violent crimes on Canadian soil, which led to Canada expelling six Indian diplomats, and India expelling six Canadian diplomats in retaliation. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government has repeatedly accused Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s representatives of engaging in covert campaigns to repress and kill Sikh activists living in Canada, including gunning down Hardeep Singh Nijjar in Surrey, B.C., last year.

It all boiled over this week in multiple Canadian communities, where out-of-control demonstrations by nationalist Hindus and Sikhs led to condemnation from politicians and forced municipal leaders to contemplate new bylaws that would ban protests at places of worship. In Surrey, three men were also arrested after violence broke out when hundreds of demonstrators showed up at a Hindu temple.

Sikh and Hindus live side-by-side in Brampton, an Ontario city of about 750,000 where one-quarter of the population is Sikh and one in five residents are Hindu. While tension over the goal to carve out a Sikh homeland in India called Khalistan has been around for a long time, this sort of violence between the two groups in Canada is uncommon.



And it has geopolitical undertones that highlight Canada’s increasingly fraught relationship with India.



“Hindus have had enough,” said Arvind Mishra, a 35-year-old IT consultant in Brampton who came to Canada from India about four years ago. “They’re frustrated. They’re agitated and they’re very, very angry. We feel marginalized.”



Mr. Mishra, who said he was inside Brampton’s Hindu Sabha temple with his wife and nine-month-old daughter last Sunday when the fighting began outside with poles and fists, said Sikh demonstrators crossed a line by protesting at a religious site. He blames Ottawa for allowing pro-Khalistan rhetoric, which many Hindus see as support for terrorism, to go unchecked. With anger over the anti-Indian sentiment in the Khalistan movement building for years, it should be no surprise Hindus are pushing back, he said.



The Sikhs say their fight is not with Hindus, but with Indian government meddling in Canada. The Khalistani protesters claimed the event at the Hindu temple Sunday – where Indian consular staff were helping Indian immigrants apply for government pensions – was part of surveillance efforts to keep tabs on pro-Khalistan Sikhs. About 80 per cent of the 1,000 people inside the building at the time were Sikh, according to temple president Madhusudan Lama.



Story continues below advertisement

This is not a religious battle. This is not a battle between Sikhs and Hindus,” said Inderjeet Singh Gosal, an organizer of Sunday’s demonstration outside the Hindu Sabha temple. “This wasn’t an attempt to attack any place of worship. The reason we were there to protest was strictly against the Indian government officials.”



Later that night, a mob of about 300 pro-India counter-protesters – some masked and armed with bats – converged on the nearby Malton gurdwara, known for its strong ties to the pro-Khalistan movement. The following night, riot police tried to contain a larger crowd of protesters, some draped in Indian flags, who took over the street in front of Hindu Sabha temple and were seen kicking vehicles. Three men were arrested.



Relations between Canada and India have been strained since the killing of Mr. Nijjar, a leader in the pro-Khalistan movement, in June, 2023. Three months later, Mr. Trudeau stood in Parliament and alleged that agents of the India government were involved in the shooting.



Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre blamed Mr. Trudeau for sowing the divisions that led to the violent clashes in Brampton. Mr. Modi criticized what he called “cowardly attempts to intimidate our diplomats” in the deepening diplomatic row. Liberal MP Chandra Arya, who represents an Ottawa riding, said the protests show just how emboldened the Sikh sovereignty movement has become.

Many Hindus blame Sikh extremists, responsible for the Air India bombing that killed 329 people in 1985, for fuelling unrest back in India. Sikhs activists, meanwhile, have never forgotten a violent crackdown on Sikhs in India in the 1980s, and have recently drawn New Delhi’s ire by holding a referendum among Indian immigrants on Khalistan independence.



This week, that tension erupted in Brampton.



“Anytime you have anything where there’s a threat or intimidation relating to a place of worship, that kind of hits a primal chord,” said Dan Stanton, who was an intelligence officer in the Canadian Security Intelligence Service for 32 years.



Canada needs to be wary of growing radicalization on either side of the Khalistan issue, he said. Indian consular officials have become a “lightning rod from the Sikh community’s perspective,” he added, part of the reason the Peel Regional Police chief asked the Indian consulate to consider holding pension events at non-religious sites.



“Indian representation in Canada has been, of course, allegedly involved in murders and extraditions killings and arsons and that. So it’s quite a tinderbox,” Mr. Stanton said. “And then you just, when you have an incident at outside a religious institution … it’s almost like throwing a match.



Religious leaders on both sides have condemned the violence and say emotions are being inflamed by a handful of people. Among them, they say, is Ron Benarjee, a self-described “hardcore Hindu nationalist” known for inflammatory statements against Muslims. He appeared in a video recorded outside the Hindu temple Sunday night, calling on protesters to storm Sikh temples.



Mr. Benarjee, 57, was denounced by Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown for trying to encourage violence and was charged with promoting hate speech by Peel Regional Police. He could not be reached for comment.



Arrest warrants have also been issued for two other men, a 24-year-old from Kitchener and a 22-year-old, for their roles in the violence.



Meanwhile, Rajinder Parsad, a Hindu priest who was caught on camera telling the crowd “if anyone opposes us, we will kill them,” was suspended from the Hindu Sabha temple, according to Mr. Lama. An off-duty Peel Regional Police officer who participated in the pro-Khalistan protest was also suspended.



Back at the Malton Gurdwara, one of the men standing guard said he never thought he would feel the need to protect his place of worship in Canada.

“I thought we’d left all that behind,” said Prince Kler, a dispatcher at a trucking company. “But apparently not.”


Link(paywall): https://www.theglobeandmail.com/can...pton-boil-over-with-violent-protests-clashes/
The Toronto Sun, for the last 20 years at least, has been more sympathetic to India than the awful Toronto Star and ( often) Globe and Mail. The Sun's articles emphasise the Islamic threat and China's threat. There was actually a phase when there was a slew of very pro Hindu, pro India articles when Tareq Fatah had a weekly column. Some of them were quite effusive. He was heavily against the Pakistani state and ideology. The Sun also once displayed a noticeably Hindu couple as victims of a robbery, right on their cover. The Toronto Star would only show Hindus in a bad light, on their front page, usually as some kind of crooks.
 
Canada is also quite resource-heavy. obviously much further away so not as competitive as aussie, but its the same guy but much further away, with the potential to become a global superpower one day (IF climate change happens in its worst case scenario, Russia and Canada become the new Americas, India and China become nigeria).
This is why indian colonization to Canada is very critical for our survival in terms of hedging our bets.
Because Aussie may be closer, but Aussie is basically a less sandy but even drier Saudi Arabia. Not enough water to transplant entire India. However, Canada DOES have shit tons of fertile and and largest freshwater reserve on the planet - and IF Greta Annoyingberg is correct, once a lot of that fertile land becomes ice free and gets 6-8 months growing season, Canada suddenly becomes the new 'place to be'.

Nah i was asking currently, as in can we buy something to establish leverage( after Turdeau is gone ), i know they have oil that they extract from some "tar sands" in a province called Alberta but know nothing else about what they have.

Cheenq has such import/export leverage over many, many countries including Australia previously.
 
Nah i was asking currently, as in can we buy something to establish leverage( after Turdeau is gone ), i know they have oil that they extract from some "tar sands" in a province called Alberta but know nothing else about what they have.

Cheenq has such import/export leverage over many, many countries including Australia previously.
I dont know if India can handle tar sands or not - tar sand refining isnt just simple modifications you use to switch between brent crude or saudi crude, its a completely new damn thing. The hillarity of how retarded canada is, is that canada imports its own oil from saudi, coz Canada is ' ew refinery for tar sands = extra dirty, no no we are greeeeeeeeeen'. So all of Canada's tar sands go to texas. Who keep most of it and send us back some refined oil but most of our refined oil is saudi crude that we refine coz we are le stupid.
 

"Khalistani separatists don't represent Sikh community in Canada: Justin Trudeau"​


And

“There are many supporters of the (Prime Minister Narendra) Modi Government is Canada but they do not represent all Hindu Canadians as a whole.”

after watching trudeau for a year now, after seeing this post went and checked the events around that day.
Trudeau does not make statements without a purpose, the guy is a walking talking red herring generator.
manchild was setting this up to avoid questions on economy.


View: https://youtu.be/hmsztgO8Vus?t=997
 
By the way, most of the news re: India-Canada/Hindu-Sikh that i see here are CBC and the Sun group papers.
Sun groups ( Vancouver Sun, Toronto Sun, Calgary Herald, etc) are ALL libbu leftie media and CBC is literally a more govt. controlled version of doordarshan. it WILL peddle watever the govt of canada is peddling.

However, there is another reputed group, the conservative ones ( toronto star is one of those papers) where Globe & mail is basically the more sane conservative version of fox news and G&M is to Pierre Polievre what Fox News is to Trump.
Now, obviously G&M isnt gonna reflect same language and tone as Swarajya or something RW indian on the issue and they wont throw the khalistanis under the bus completely, but notice the much much more balanced reporting and subtle change of tone in its reporting :
=====================================================================

Fears of more clashes between Sikhs and Hindus in Brampton, Ont., as Canada-India rift spills over into suburbs​

Greg Mercer, Jill Mahoney and Colin Freeze
Brampton, ont., mississauga, ont. and toronto
Published Yesterday
Open this photo in gallery:

Members of the Sikh community patrol the Sri Guru Singh Sabha Malton Gurdwara in Mississauga, Ont., with bats, clubs, sticks, swords and other defence weapons after the community was subject to a slew of violence from pro-India activists on Nov. 5.Christopher Katsarov/The Globe and Mail
79


Listen to this article

Young men clutching swords, baseball bats and pieces of lumber are standing guard outside a Sikh gurdwara near Toronto’s Pearson Airport, their eyes scanning the perimeter for signs of trouble in the dark.

Prayers broadcasting from inside the temple mix with Punjabi music blaring from a pick-up truck parked nearby. The mood has been tense ever since the sun set.

“We have to be ready,” said Daljit Singh Sekhon, president of the Sri Guru Singh Sabha Malton gurdwara in Mississauga, Ont., glancing at a bank of security cameras Tuesday.

Story continues below advertisement


Anxious scenes like this unfolded this week at temples in Brampton and nearby Mississauga as the growing rift between Canada and India spilled over into Canadian suburbs. Hindus and Sikhs, divided over a decades-long fight to carve out a sovereign nation in a northwest region of India, clashed in the streets, and some threatened a wave of sectarian violence rarely seen in this country.

The conflicts come just weeks after RCMP announced they had evidence of Indian officials’ involvement in homicides, extortion and other violent crimes on Canadian soil, which led to Canada expelling six Indian diplomats, and India expelling six Canadian diplomats in retaliation. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government has repeatedly accused Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s representatives of engaging in covert campaigns to repress and kill Sikh activists living in Canada, including gunning down Hardeep Singh Nijjar in Surrey, B.C., last year.

It all boiled over this week in multiple Canadian communities, where out-of-control demonstrations by nationalist Hindus and Sikhs led to condemnation from politicians and forced municipal leaders to contemplate new bylaws that would ban protests at places of worship. In Surrey, three men were also arrested after violence broke out when hundreds of demonstrators showed up at a Hindu temple.

Sikh and Hindus live side-by-side in Brampton, an Ontario city of about 750,000 where one-quarter of the population is Sikh and one in five residents are Hindu. While tension over the goal to carve out a Sikh homeland in India called Khalistan has been around for a long time, this sort of violence between the two groups in Canada is uncommon.



And it has geopolitical undertones that highlight Canada’s increasingly fraught relationship with India.



“Hindus have had enough,” said Arvind Mishra, a 35-year-old IT consultant in Brampton who came to Canada from India about four years ago. “They’re frustrated. They’re agitated and they’re very, very angry. We feel marginalized.”



Mr. Mishra, who said he was inside Brampton’s Hindu Sabha temple with his wife and nine-month-old daughter last Sunday when the fighting began outside with poles and fists, said Sikh demonstrators crossed a line by protesting at a religious site. He blames Ottawa for allowing pro-Khalistan rhetoric, which many Hindus see as support for terrorism, to go unchecked. With anger over the anti-Indian sentiment in the Khalistan movement building for years, it should be no surprise Hindus are pushing back, he said.



The Sikhs say their fight is not with Hindus, but with Indian government meddling in Canada. The Khalistani protesters claimed the event at the Hindu temple Sunday – where Indian consular staff were helping Indian immigrants apply for government pensions – was part of surveillance efforts to keep tabs on pro-Khalistan Sikhs. About 80 per cent of the 1,000 people inside the building at the time were Sikh, according to temple president Madhusudan Lama.



Story continues below advertisement

This is not a religious battle. This is not a battle between Sikhs and Hindus,” said Inderjeet Singh Gosal, an organizer of Sunday’s demonstration outside the Hindu Sabha temple. “This wasn’t an attempt to attack any place of worship. The reason we were there to protest was strictly against the Indian government officials.”



Later that night, a mob of about 300 pro-India counter-protesters – some masked and armed with bats – converged on the nearby Malton gurdwara, known for its strong ties to the pro-Khalistan movement. The following night, riot police tried to contain a larger crowd of protesters, some draped in Indian flags, who took over the street in front of Hindu Sabha temple and were seen kicking vehicles. Three men were arrested.



Relations between Canada and India have been strained since the killing of Mr. Nijjar, a leader in the pro-Khalistan movement, in June, 2023. Three months later, Mr. Trudeau stood in Parliament and alleged that agents of the India government were involved in the shooting.



Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre blamed Mr. Trudeau for sowing the divisions that led to the violent clashes in Brampton. Mr. Modi criticized what he called “cowardly attempts to intimidate our diplomats” in the deepening diplomatic row. Liberal MP Chandra Arya, who represents an Ottawa riding, said the protests show just how emboldened the Sikh sovereignty movement has become.

Many Hindus blame Sikh extremists, responsible for the Air India bombing that killed 329 people in 1985, for fuelling unrest back in India. Sikhs activists, meanwhile, have never forgotten a violent crackdown on Sikhs in India in the 1980s, and have recently drawn New Delhi’s ire by holding a referendum among Indian immigrants on Khalistan independence.



This week, that tension erupted in Brampton.



“Anytime you have anything where there’s a threat or intimidation relating to a place of worship, that kind of hits a primal chord,” said Dan Stanton, who was an intelligence officer in the Canadian Security Intelligence Service for 32 years.



Canada needs to be wary of growing radicalization on either side of the Khalistan issue, he said. Indian consular officials have become a “lightning rod from the Sikh community’s perspective,” he added, part of the reason the Peel Regional Police chief asked the Indian consulate to consider holding pension events at non-religious sites.



“Indian representation in Canada has been, of course, allegedly involved in murders and extraditions killings and arsons and that. So it’s quite a tinderbox,” Mr. Stanton said. “And then you just, when you have an incident at outside a religious institution … it’s almost like throwing a match.



Religious leaders on both sides have condemned the violence and say emotions are being inflamed by a handful of people. Among them, they say, is Ron Benarjee, a self-described “hardcore Hindu nationalist” known for inflammatory statements against Muslims. He appeared in a video recorded outside the Hindu temple Sunday night, calling on protesters to storm Sikh temples.



Mr. Benarjee, 57, was denounced by Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown for trying to encourage violence and was charged with promoting hate speech by Peel Regional Police. He could not be reached for comment.



Arrest warrants have also been issued for two other men, a 24-year-old from Kitchener and a 22-year-old, for their roles in the violence.



Meanwhile, Rajinder Parsad, a Hindu priest who was caught on camera telling the crowd “if anyone opposes us, we will kill them,” was suspended from the Hindu Sabha temple, according to Mr. Lama. An off-duty Peel Regional Police officer who participated in the pro-Khalistan protest was also suspended.



Back at the Malton Gurdwara, one of the men standing guard said he never thought he would feel the need to protect his place of worship in Canada.

“I thought we’d left all that behind,” said Prince Kler, a dispatcher at a trucking company. “But apparently not.”


Link(paywall): https://www.theglobeandmail.com/can...pton-boil-over-with-violent-protests-clashes/

These fuckers of police pressed charges against Hindu leaders for hate speech but refused to press charges against Pannun for hate speech because Pannun was freedom of speech. Yeah right.
 
Kuch bhi, whole article has the same "poor seekhs vs ebul Hindoo Nashnulists" like the rest of the gora media coverage.

Khalistan and the current drama in Kaneda is a deep state backed drama, don't try to see any Left-Right-Left or Librandu-Cuckservative in this, sabka (((malik))) ek hi hai
No.. therr are 2 things mentioned jn the article that librandu outlets like CBC, WAPO, NYT never do..
1. Sikh extremists responsble for violence back in India..
2. Sikh extrdmists bombing of Air India killing 329 people.. Wapo, NYT dont mention this.. as they want to portray Khalistan movement as a non violent movement..
 
No.. therr are 2 things mentioned jn the article that librandu outlets like CBC, WAPO, NYT never do..
1. Sikh extremists responsble for violence back in India..
2. Sikh extrdmists bombing of Air India killing 329 people.. Wapo, NYT dont mention this.. as they want to portray Khalistan movement as a non violent movement..
How many times have you seen our xutiyas from the MEA or even the GoI say so on the floor of parliament or outside especially on western soil or in PCs or interviews ? Why blame those westerners ? They've an agenda . What's our excuse or agenda ?
 
How many times have you seen our xutiyas from the MEA or even the GoI say so on the floor of parliament or outside especially on western soil or in PCs or interviews ? Why blame those westerners ? They've an agenda . What's our excuse or agenda ?
WE only react that too to the minimum extent necessary...this Arsh Dalla arrsted in Canada today, is a NIA designated khalistani terrorist wanted for orechestrating killings in India.. We even shared his precise locations in canada.. but Canucks did nothing..
This arrest too I think would not have happened if Harris had won..
 
How many times have you seen our xutiyas from the MEA or even the GoI say so on the floor of parliament or outside especially on western soil or in PCs or interviews ? Why blame those westerners ? They've an agenda . What's our excuse or agenda ?

You know what agenda is there
Appeasement of :balleballe:
 
WE only react that too to the minimum extent necessary...this Arsh Dalla arrsted in Canada today, is a NIA designated khalistani terrorist wanted for orechestrating killings in India.. We even shared his precise locations in canada.. but Canucks did nothing..
This arrest too I think would not have happened if Harris had won..
Nope. It has more to do with that massive fentanyl drug bust up in rural Canada. Canadian Newspapers aren't reporting it but I'd be very surprised if the kingpin arrested didn't have links to Khali stanis. The chickens are coming home to roost.

Watch out for this Arsh Dalla case. I'm betting it has something to do with his activities either in Canada or the US not with what he's done / is doing w.r.t India.

Canada & the US may have plenty to disagree with but believe me , Khalistan or its sympathizers are not part of it .

Neither will Trump wade into the Trudeau vs GoI spat much. He's got much bigger fish to fry.
 
Woodside Cinemas plays movies in Tamil, Hindi, Malayalam, Telugu languages


Justin thought he will keep Khali votes as they are organised like the greens, Khalis will only target Indian diplomats, he can claim a counter to allegedly appeasing Chinese.

Never in his wildest dreams would have he thought of Indians consolidating, that too led by a heathen priest, Justins Diwali show with lelis not withstanding.

The Khalis may have actively groomed politicians , participated enthusiastically in party election process in which it seems only few goras are interested hence around 20 khalis in parliament.

Anyway the heathens have Awaken and Trudeau can't hide by calling moody ebil.

It's now more of a Canada problem.
 
"The latest shootings appearing to target exhibitors of South Indian-language films follow years of vandalism.
Beginning around 2015, cinemas screening South Indian films across the GTA have been the targets of screen-slashings and pepper spray attacks."

Indian community can't watch movies peacefully in canada.


 
These fuckers of police pressed charges against Hindu leaders for hate speech but refused to press charges against Pannun for hate speech because Pannun was freedom of speech. Yeah right.
Police don’t charge, it’s the district attorney. Police only arraign candidates for charging.
 
Long live Hindu-Sikh unity.

The unity between Hindus and Sikhs is unbreakable, bound by shared ancestry, culture, and history. When the Tenth Guru called for volunteers to defend Punjab from oppression, it was Hindus who first answered the call, standing up to oppression. Families across Punjab contributed sons to this cause, including my own ancestors, whose descendants still reside in Punjab. We share the same traditions and maintain a common “Panda” in Haridwar. The only difference lies in our places of worship: while they go to the Gurudwara, we go to the temple. This unity, forged through sacrifice and common roots, remains a testament to our inseparable bond.

British colonial policy, however, attempted to divide communities. After the 1919 Jallianwala Bagh massacre, the British encouraged a separate Sikh identity, establishing the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC) under the Sikh Gurdwaras Act of 1925. Over time, the SGPC became a political force, especially after the 1947 Partition and the migration of Sikhs to Indian Punjab. Later, in 1966, Punjab was restructured to create a Sikh-majority state, which became highly prosperous due to water resources from the Bhakra and Pong dams. But this prosperity also sparked other demands, including a call for Khalistan—a movement encouraged by Pakistan and certain foreign interests. The British divide-and-rule legacy continued, now under the guise of freedom of speech.

Some Sikhs later migrated to the UK, Canada, and Australia, where certain groups revived the call for Khalistan, occasionally resorting to violence, as seen in incidents like the 1984 unrest in Amritsar and the 1985 Air India bombing. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, influenced by potential voter support from the Khalistani lobby, risked diplomatic ties with India. His missteps and Khalistani support led to violence, including riots outside an Indian temple in Canada. Its immediate economic effect was loss of about $700 million a year with complete stoppage of Indian students arriving in Canada. Also potential loss of $400 million in a defence vehicle deal. Other possibilities include possible loss of Indian pulses business for the Canadian state of Saskatchewan (amounting to over a billion dollar) which is a major exporter to India. Trudeau had not counted all this in his missteps but he does not care because he knows his time as PM is over.

In a recent turning point, Canadian authorities in British Columbia uncovered a $500 million drug operation linked to a key Khalistani supporter, shedding light on these influences. Under global pressure, Canada has since acted against these elements, shifting attention away from divisive agendas and back toward unity.

This version highlights the main points concisely, with smoother flow. Let me know if you’d like any further tweaks.
 

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