Tag: India

  • Canada accuses India’s Amit Shah over campaign targeting Sikh separatists

    Canada accuses India’s Amit Shah over campaign targeting Sikh separatists

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    Ottawa says the close ally of India’s PM is involved in an intimidation campaign against Sikh separatists on Canadian soil. Indian sources call the allegations ‘flimsy’.

    Canada has accused Indian Minister of Home Affairs Amit Shah of being behind a campaign of violence and intimidation targeting Sikh activists, in a move likely to extend a recent diplomatic spat between Ottawa and New Delhi.

    Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister David Morrison confirmed to the members of the national security committee late on Tuesday that the government considers Shah – considered India’s second-highest leader and a close ally of Prime Minister Narendra Modi – the architect of the campaign against Sikh separatists in Canada, which has included the assassination of an activist.

    India has not so far responded, however, Reuters news agency reported on Wednesday that government officials had rejected the accusation.

    Morrison told committee members that he had confirmed Shah’s name to The Washington Post, which had earlier reported the allegations.

    “The journalist called me and asked if it was that person. I confirmed it was that person,” Morrison told the committee. He did not reveal the evidence behind Canada’s allegation.

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has previously said Canada has credible evidence that agents of the Indian government were involved in the murder of Canadian Sikh activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar in British Columbia in June 2023.

    The assassination and aftermath have caused a diplomatic spat between the two countries.

    Canada expelled Indian diplomats that it linked to the campaign it claims has targeted Sikhs. India responded with its own expulsion of Canadian officials.

    The United States also charged a former Indian intelligence officer, Vikash Yadav, for allegedly directing a foiled plot to murder Sikh separatist leader Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, a dual US-Canadian citizen and Indian critic in New York City.

    Nathalie Drouin, Trudeau’s national security adviser, told the security committee on Tuesday that Canada had evidence the Indian government had been gathering information on Indian nationals and Canadian citizens in Canada through diplomatic channels and proxies.

    ‘Flimsy’

    Canadian authorities have in the past said that they have shared evidence with India, but officials in New Delhi have repeatedly denied that and called the allegations absurd.

    India did not immediately comment on the accusation against Shah. However, Reuters quoted unnamed government sources who said that New Delhi considers Canada’s evidence to be “very weak” and “flimsy” and that it does not expect it to cause any trouble for the powerful interior minister.

    Modi’s government has branded Sikh separatists “terrorists” and threats to its security. The activists demand an independent homeland, known as Khalistan, to be carved out of India.

    An armed rebellion during the 1980s and 1990s killed tens of thousands. In 1984, anti-Sikh riots killed thousands following the assassination of then-Prime Minister Indira Gandhi by her Sikh bodyguards after she ordered security forces to storm the holiest Sikh temple to flush out Sikh separatists.

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  • Nationwide strike by Indian doctors over Kolkata medic’s rape, murder

    Nationwide strike by Indian doctors over Kolkata medic’s rape, murder

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    Hospitals hit by 24-hour shutdown as protests demanding protection for health workers and condemning violence swell.

    Hundreds of thousands of Indian health workers and their supporters have launched a nationwide strike to protest against the rape and murder of a trainee doctor last week at a government hospital in the eastern city of Kolkata.

    Many of the protests on Saturday were led by doctors and other healthcare workers, who were also joined by tens of thousands of other Indians demanding action.

    Hospitals and clinics across India turned away patients, except for emergency cases, on Saturday as medical professionals started a 24-hour shutdown at 6am (00:30 GMT). Faculty from medical colleges had been pressed into service for emergencies.

    “We want justice,” the protesters shouted, as they gathered in Kolkata to call for better working conditions and treatment not only for health workers, but also for women in general.

    “Hands that heal shouldn’t bleed,” one handwritten sign read.

    The discovery of the 31-year-old doctor’s bloodied body on August 9 at the state-run RG Kar Medical College and Hospital led to furious protests in several cities across the country.

    “We don’t feel safe,” Antara Das, a medical student who joined the protest in Kolkata, told Al Jazeera. “If this happened inside a hospital that is second home to us, where are we safe now?”

    Indian doctors strike after Kolkata medic's rape, murder
    A notice at the entrance of a hospital in Mumbai says the outpatients department and dispensary were shut after a 24-hour nationwide strike was declared by the Indian Medical Association on August 17 [Francis Mascarenhas/Reuters]

    The murdered doctor was found in the seminar hall of the teaching hospital where she was working a 36-hour shift. An autopsy confirmed sexual assault.

    The Indian Medical Association, (IMA), the country’s largest grouping of medics with 400,000 members, condemned the “crime of barbaric scale and the lack of safe spaces for women”, adding in a statement that both the medical fraternity and the country were “victims”.

    Hospitals and clinics in Lucknow in northern Uttar Pradesh state, Ahmedabad in western Gujarat, Guwahati in northeastern Assam and Chennai in southern Tamil Nadu as well as other cities joined the strike.

    Struggle for justice

    Rakhi Sanyal, a doctor in Kolkata and professor at the West Bengal University of Health Science, denounced the “brutal murder” of the doctor, and called for “justice” for the killing.

    “It is the duty of the administration to look after our safety,” she told Al Jazeera. “This should not have happened.”

    Doctors are demanding the implementation of the Central Protection Act, legislation to protect healthcare workers from violence.

    They are also calling for more stringent laws, including making any attack on on-duty medics an offence without the possibility of bail.

    One man has been detained in connection with the crime, which is now being probed by federal investigators after state government officers were accused of mishandling the investigation.

    Many cases of crimes against women go unreported in India because of the stigma surrounding sexual violence and a lack of faith in the police.

    There were more than 31,000 reported rapes in India in 2022, the latest year for which data is available, according to the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB).

    At a rally by doctors in the capital, New Delhi, one poster read: “Enough is enough.”

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