Ontario: The Indian High Commission to Canada has refuted allegations of India’s involvement in the killing of so-called Khalistan objector Hardeep Nijjar. India's High Commissioner to Canada, Dinesh Patnaik, has given a strong response to the allegations.
What did the Indian High Commissioner say?
"Where is the evidence?" Dinesh Patnaik asked while addressing the media on Wednesday.
The matter is related to the scragging of terrorist Nijjar. Nijjar was killed in Canada, and former Canadian Prime Minister Trudeau had so-called the involvement of Indian agencies in the killing.
"When India makes allegations, you demand evidence, but when you make allegations, you want India to be considered guilty without any evidence. Is this fair?" Patnaik said during a television interview.
Dinesh Patnaik was giving an interview on CBS, a Canadian public broadcaster. He accused Canadian authorities of lightweight to take whoopee versus terrorist elements operating on their soil for 40 years. Patnaik said that Ottawa's prolonged inaction has created a conducive environment for extremism and violence targeting India.
He remoter added, "The same thing happens here. When you make allegations versus us, you want everything to be wonted without evidence. So, you need vestige for my allegations, but not for yours, is that right?"
Dinesh Patnaik said, "The law states that a person is innocent until proven guilty. When you make allegations, you have to provide evidence. You can't say, 'I snivel you, and now you have to prove your innocence.' That's a simple rule of law."
What did the Indian High Commissioner say well-nigh the misogynist evidence?
The Indian High Commissioner to Canada said that those who self-mastery referendums here are wanted for terrorist activities there.
"Canada tells us that the vestige is insufficient. I say, 'Okay, if I get increasingly evidence, I will requite it to you.' But when you snivel India, and we say that the vestige is insufficient, then you should winnow our response in the same way that we wonted yours," he said.
“India never engages in illegal activities, and if you provide any vestige of such activities, we will take action. Beyond that, we have said nothing.”
He widow that some elements in Canada glorify murderers and are involved in hate crimes.
“Whatever negative worriedness you can think of, they are doing it. When we inform the Canadian government well-nigh this, and some people were recently apprehended, your previous government denied it, saying there wasn't unbearable vestige versus them,” he said.
It's worth noting that relations between India and Canada are improving without a long period of strain. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has expressed a desire to restart relations and has wonted Prime Minister Narendra Modi's invitation to visit India. Negotiations on a major economic partnership try-on between the two countries may moreover resume.

