India calls Canada's allegations against Amit Shah "absurd"
The comments came after Canada's Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister David Morrison on Tuesday alleged that Shah ordered a campaign of violence, intimidation and intelligence-gathering targeting Sikh separatists inside Canada
PTI
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Dismissing the allegations as absurd, Indian government officials have consistently denied that Canada provided evidence.PHOTO:PTI
New Delhi, 2
Nov
India has
protested in the strongest possible terms the references made by a Canadian
minister about Union Home Minister Amit Shah and such "absurd and
baseless" allegations will have serious consequences for bilateral ties
between the two countries, the Ministry of External Affairs said on Saturday.
The
comments came after Canada's Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister David Morrison on
Tuesday alleged that Shah ordered a campaign of violence, intimidation and
intelligence-gathering targeting Sikh separatists inside Canada.
Morrison
had also told Canadian Parliament members of the national security committee
that he had confirmed Shah's name to The Washington Post, which first reported
the allegations.
MEA
spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said this revelation that high Canadian government
officials deliberately leaked unfounded insinuations to international media as
part of a conscious strategy to discredit India and influence other nations
only confirms the view that the Indian government has long held about the
current Canadian government's political agenda and behavioural pattern.
Replying to
queries during a weekly press briefing here, Jaiswal said such irresponsible
actions will have serious consequences for bilateral ties.
He said
India summoned a Canadian High Commission representative on Friday and the
official was served a diplomatic note to lodge the protest in strongest terms
on the "absurd and baseless" references made by the Canadian deputy
minister about India's Union Home Minister.
While
addressing the Parliament members, Morrison did not say how Canada knew of
Shah's alleged involvement.
Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau had said a year ago that Canada had credible evidence
agents of the Indian government were involved in the murder of Canadian Sikh
activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar in British Columbia in June 2023.
Dismissing the allegations as absurd, Indian government officials have consistently denied that Canada provided evidence.-PTI
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