Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Amid India’s concerns, SFJ’s referendum today

- letterschd@hindustant­imes.com Anirudh Bhattachar­yya

TORONTO: The so-called separatist Khalistan referendum will take place at a municipal plaza in the city of Calgary, in Canada’s Alberta, after authoritie­s said they could not control how the public space was used.

This will be the second such referendum, organised by the secessioni­st group Sikhs for Justice (SFJ), to be held on government property in the country, a matter that India has already complained about to the Global Affairs Canada, the foreign ministry.

In an interview with the outlet CityNews, Calgary’s IndoCanadi­an Mayor Jyoti Gondek said, “There are many things that happen on Municipal Plaza because it’s a public space. These are not events that we sanction, they are certainly not events that we approve. The public is able to gather and do what they wish to do as a community.”

She added that it was “not something we can control or patrol.”

The outlet also cited a statement from City of Calgary’s director, corporate properties and buildings, Ian Fleming, who said, “Individual­s and organisati­ons can use the Plaza without permission, applicatio­n or permit if they adhere to the expectatio­ns and guidelines of appropriat­e activities and behaviour.”

Ahead of the referendum on Sunday, the Plaza already features a large poster, which shows among others Talwinder Singh Parmar.

Parmar is considered the mastermind of the bombing of Air India flight 182, the Kanishka, on June 23, 1985, claiming 329 lives. This remains the worst-ever terrorist incident in Canadian history.

Also featured on posters is Hardeep Singh Nijjar, SFJ’s principal organiser for the province of British Columbia who was murdered in Surrey, British Columbia on June 18 last year.

Nijjar was designated as a terrorist in India but never faced charges in Canada.

His killing led to a subsequent rupture in ties between India and Canada after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s statement in the House of Commons on September 18, 2023, that there were “credible allegation­s” of a potential link between Indian agents and the murder. India dismissed the accusation as “absurd.”

In its official communique to Canada’s foreign ministry, India’s High Commission in Ottawa protested the use of public property for a separatist event targeting the territoria­l integrity of the country.

The last time a Government facility was registered for the referendum was the Tamanawis Secondary School in Surrey, British Columbia. However, on September 3 last year, week before the scheduled date for the referendum, a spokespers­on for the Surrey District School Board said, in a release, that it had “cancelled a community rental of one of our schools due to a violation of our rental agreement.”

That referendum was ultimately held on September 10 last year at the Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara in Surrey. Prior to that on September 18, 2022, it was organised at the Gore Meadows Community Centre, a municipal property in Brampton in the Greater Toronto Area or GTA.

IN ITS OFFICIAL COMMUNIQUE TO CANADA’S FOREIGN MINISTRY, INDIA HIGH COMMISSION IN OTTAWA HAS ALREADY PROTESTED THE USE OF PUBLIC PROPERTY FOR A SEPARATIST EVENT

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