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Indian Ambassador to Canada, Sanjay Kumar Verma, talks straight on Indo-Canada on-going unease

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Our Bureau

Montreal

Indian High Commissioner to Canada Sanjay Kumar Verma said that the Sikh separatist groups in Canada were crossing ‘a big red line’ in his first public remarks since three Indian nationals accused of killing Khalistan separatist Hardeep Singh Nijjar last year were arrested and produced before a court by Canadian police. He said that New Delhi sees it as a matter of national security and of the country’s territorial integrity.

“Indians will decide the fate of India, not the foreigners,” Verma told the Montreal Council on Foreign Relations, a prominent think-tank.

He also told the Council that relations between India and Canada are positive overall despite “a lot of noise”.

Verma also said that the two countries are “trying to resolve this issue.” “We are ready to sit down at the table any day, and we are doing that,” he said.

On Tuesday, India told Canada that celebration and glorification of violence should not be a part of any civilised society.

Verma said the deeper problems underneath the recent “negative” developments have to do with Canada’s misunderstanding of “decades-old issues,” which he blames Canadians of Indian origin for resurfacing.

He said his chief concern is “national-security threats emanating from the land of Canada,” noting that India does not recognise dual nationality, so anyone who emigrates is considered a foreigner.

“Foreigners having, if I can call it, (an) evil eye on the territorial integrity of India — that is a big red line for us,” he said.

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