On Friday, Sikh Separatist staged a protest against India in Toronto, Canada, on the occasion of the 16th-month anniversary of the death of Sikh Separatist Hardeep Singh Nijjar. The Sikh Separatists elements raised slogans, including “Kill Modi Politics”, “Long Live Trudeau”, and “Long Live Khalistan”, as they desecrate the Indian flag. The Sikh Separatists elements also demanded the closure of all Indian consulates in Canada.
Investigative journalist Mocha Bezirgan tweeted on the social media platform X, ‘the protesting pro-Khalistani elements were seen standing on an Indian flag. There was an effigy of Prime Minister Narendra Modi in a mock prison, and the protesters were seen beating the effigy with shoes. Furthermore, one of the protesters was holding a placard that read, “Modi’s challenge to Canada’s sovereignty. India attempted to interfere in Canada’s elections: CSIS.”
In another video shared by Mocha, Sikh Separatits were seen marching through the streets of Canada, raising slogans. They attacked an effigy of PM Modi, desecrated the Indian flag, and demanded that Justin Trudeau government shut down all Indian consulates. In one of the shots, the destroyed effigy was seen covered in fake blood.
Nijjar, who was killed in a gang war, was a wanted terrorist in India. There were various requests for his extradition by the Government of India, but Canada denied those requests. On 18th June 2023, he was killed outside a Gurdwara, where he served as president, in Surrey, BC. The Gurdwara has announced it will hold a memorial on 20th October for four Sikh Separatist terrorists, including Talwinder Singh Parmar, the main accused in Canada’s deadliest terror attack, the bombing of Air India flight 182, also known as the Kanishka Bombing of 1985.
329 people were killed in that terror attack, most of whom were Canadians. Despite the fact that the attack, the deadliest airborne terror attack before 9/11, was initiated by Sikh Separatists terrorists, the Trudeau-led Canadian government has been sympathetic towards the Sikh Separatism movement to gain voter support.
Comments