Canadian police warn Sikh activist of threat to life as Carney publicizes India visit

As Prime Minister Mark Carney heads to India this week for trade talks, police have warned a Canadian Sikh leader a couple of “credible threat” to his life.

Moninder Singh, who heads the Sikh Federation of Canada, said a member of the Vancouver Police Department delivered the caution on Sunday.

The tip in regards to the threat got here from a confidential informant, the officer told Singh, whose wife and youngsters were also deemed to be in danger.

The Sikh activist, who lives in Surrey, B.C., shared an audio recording of the police visit, in addition to a photograph of the officer’s business card, with Global News.

“Occasionally, the VPD conducts what is known as a ‘Duty to Warn’ once we receive information regarding a threat to someone,” a police spokesperson said.

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“I can’t comment on if any ‘Duty to Warn’ incidents happened over the weekend as there can be an ongoing criminal investigation associated.”

Police didn’t share any further details but Singh believes it’s the newest attempt by the federal government of India to silence its Canadian opponents.

in 2022, Singh and fellow activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar were the primary to receive an obligation to warn notice. Nijjar was gunned down the next 12 months, allegedly by the Indian government.


Since then, police have warned Singh periodically about latest threats against him but last weekend’s was the primary to incorporate his family.

Since he is just not a business person like those typically preyed upon by India’s extortion gangs, he suspects he’s being targeted due to his activism.

Singh is an outspoken critic of human rights in India, and an advocate of the Khalistan movement that supports independence for India’s Sikh-majority Punjab.

The RCMP has previously linked such threats to the Indian government, and Singh believes that can also be the case for this latest caution from police.

“India uses criminal syndicates, gangs in Canada, to perform their dirty work for them,” he said. “India taps them after which they exit and carry these political assassinations out.”

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“So I feel like the rationale why they’re targeting me, for my political expression, my support for a Sikh homeland, Khalistan, or unveiling India’s horrible human rights record, I believe it comes back to India.”


Click to play video: 'Canadian-born Sikh activist speaks publicly about assassination threats'


Canadian-born Sikh activist speaks publicly about assassination threats


Carney’s India visit a ‘slap within the face’

For Singh, the incident has underscored concerns that Carney is re-engaging with India without regard to the protection of Canada’s large Sikh community.

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Under pressure to diversity Canada’s trade partners amidst U.S. President Donald Trump’s unpredictable tariffs, Carney has turned to India.

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But national security officials have reported that the federal government of India is behind foreign interference, disinformation and transnational repression in Canada.

The RCMP believes the Indian government has collaborated with the Bishnoi gang to attack political opponents, notably Nijjar, who was killed outside a Surrey Sikh temple in 2023.

Gang leader Lawrence Bishnoi and his Canadian lieutenant Goldy Brar allegedly carried out the killing for India. The crime group can also be partly chargeable for the present extortion crisis in Canadian cities.

Following Nijjar’s murder, the FBI uncovered an analogous plot by an Indian intelligence officer to kill Canadian lawyer and activist Gurpantwant Singh Pannun in Latest York.

Then, RCMP Commissioner Mike Duheme accused India of orchestrating a broader array of violent crimes, prompting Canada to expel six India diplomats in October 2024.

Indian diplomats and agents were engaging in “clandestine activities” equivalent to collecting information on members of Canada’s South Asian community, he said.

“This information is shared with senior levels of the Indian government, who then direct the commission of significant criminal activities against Indo-Canadians through the kinetic use of Lawrence Bishnoi’s organized crime network,” National Security Advisor Nathalie Drouin testified.

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“Bishnoi is currently in jail in India, and he’s capable of order these actions through his gang, which has extensive criminal networks in India and internationally,” she said.

“Serious crimes committed in Canada include homicides, assassination plots, perpetrated extortions and other extreme violence.”

At the identical time, Canada’s foreign interference inquiry called India the “second most lively country engaging in electoral foreign interference in Canada.”

In an interview on Monday, Singh said he had received no assurances from Canadian officials that those issues had been resolved, or that India had promised to stop.

Deepening ties with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government without having handled the underlying national security threats was premature, he said.

“There’s a variety of unfinished business,” Singh said, adding that many Canadian Sikhs felt betrayed to see Carney and his officials meeting their Indian counterparts.

“It’s a little bit of a slap within the face of the Sikh community that now we have all these ongoing issues and we’re talking to a rustic that’s behind all of that.”

“We’re not holding them accountable in any which way.”


Click to play video: 'Business Matters: India envoy says Canadian trade deal possible within 12 months'


Business Matters: India envoy says Canadian trade deal possible inside 12 months


‘Proof lies on the accuser,’ Indian diplomat says

Throughout Canada’s various disclosures of India’s actions, Latest Delhi has denied them and put the blame on former prime minister Justin Trudeau, while claiming it must see evidence before taking motion.

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“The burden of proof lies on the accuser, not on the accused,” Indian High Commissioner Dinesh Patnaik told Global News in an interview on Monday.

Patnaik vowed that if such evidence surfaced, India would take motion, even when it implicated senior officials in Modi’s government.

He said he had no response to latest Canadian Security Intelligence Service annual report, which referred to India’s role within the Nijjar murder.

The killing signalled “a major escalation in India’s repression efforts against the Khalistan movement and a transparent intent to focus on individuals in North America,” CSIS wrote.

“I cannot say anything about it,” said Patnaik, who replaced the previous high commissioner expelled from Canada for his role in violence against Canadians.

“Same way when now we have our own report, it says that Canada supports separatist movements in India, that Canada support Khalistani movement in India,” he said.

“That’s the best way our agencies have a look at it.”

Asked about extortions by Indian nationals working for India-based crime groups equivalent to the Bishnoi gang, he said that was Canada’s problem.

An RCMP report released to Global News under the Access to Information Act said the Bishnoi gang was “acting on behalf of the Indian government.”

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“You might have to take care of it. In case you start pointing fingers outside, that’s a special matter. It’s very easy to point fingers outside,” the high commissioner said.

Stewart.Bell@globalnews.ca

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