Khalistan terrorist Hardeep Singh Nijjar in June at a Sikh holy shrine in British Columbia's Surrey, in June this year. While Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has remained unfazed about his ‘credible allegations’ made against India, accusing the latter of being involved in the June killing of the Khalistan terrorist, India has over and again refuted and binned such claims.
In an interview published by US media outlet New York Times, PM Trudeau cracked down on his allegations and said that Canada-based Nijjar's killing on ‘Canadian soil’ is ‘absolutely unacceptable.’ When PM Trudeau was asked whether his allies have been supporting him in his allegations against India, he said, “Every ally I have spoken to, bar none, has been unequivocal that this sort of violation of a country’s sovereignty and of the rule of law is absolutely unacceptable. I think people are quietly waiting to see how things unfold.
But standing up for the rule of law isn’t a momentary thing. It’s a process that happens over weeks and months." Exciting news! Mint is now on WhatsApp Channels :rocket: Subscribe today by clicking the link and stay updated with the latest financial insights! Click here! In the interview published by New York Times, PM Trudeau has mentioned that the ‘most fitting’ resolution to the killing of Khalistan terrorist Hardeep Singh Nijjar would be, “a number of people thrown in jail, convicted.
A series of lessons learned and changes made to the way the Indian government and the intelligence services operate". Prime Minister Trudeau addressing a press conference on Friday, had said, “Canada has shared the credible allegations that I talked about on Monday with India.
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