Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Canadian and Indian Governments Express Concern With Pro-Khalisan Activity By Canadian Sikhs
Last week, Canada's foreign minister John Baird in a visit to India promised to do "whatever we can within the limits of the Constitution" to prevent extremist activity in Canada by Sikhs who want to create a separate Sikh state of Khalistan in the Punjab area of India. As reported by the Toronto Star, Baird made the comments at a press conference along with India's external affairs minister S. M. Krishna. The government of India has been pressing Canada to take action against the separatists. Reflecting the views of the Indian government, the Indian Overseas Congress has said it wants all Khalistan insignia to be removed from Sikh Gurdwara’s in the United States and Canada. (SikhSiyasat Network, 9/14). In a press release, the Indian Overseas Congress claims that Canada's tax laws justify the call for removal of Khalistan insignia, since tax-exempt organizations generally cannot devote more than 10% of their resources political activities. (SikhSivasat Network, 9/18). Meanwhile, Canada's Sikh Coalition criticized attempts to limit pro-Khalistan activity, saying that it is an attempt "to silence any political discourse on the current state of Punjab by associating political discussion with extremism."