Online Desk: Canadian authorities have uncovered a previously unknown plot to assassinate a Sikh activist on North American soil, according to reports from US media on Wednesday.
Recent reports from various US and Canadian media outlets highlighted a Nov 3, 2023, police raid in Brampton, Ontario, which resulted in the arrest of five men on firearms charges.
The arrests occurred just a day before the son of a prominent member of the Sikh independence movement was to be married in the Toronto-area city. Several well-known activists, including New York-based lawyer Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, were expected to attend the wedding.
The accused include Swaranpreet Singh, 21; Jobanpreet Singh, 21; Maninder Singh, 22; and Ramanpreet Singh, 30. The fifth individual, Amandeep Singh, is also charged in connection with a killing that Canada has directly linked to the government of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, according to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC).
Amandeep Singh was arrested four and a half months after the murder of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a prominent Sikh-Canadian activist and president of the Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara in Surrey, British Columbia. Nijjar, a leading advocate for Sikh independence, was shot dead in the parking lot of the gurdwara on June 18, 2023.
Bloomberg News reported on Wednesday that Indian and Canadian intelligence officials have met multiple times since the arrest to exchange information, as more arrests have come to light, potentially pointing to Indian involvement in yet another assassination plot.
New information about the plot has reportedly led to the departure of additional staff from India’s external spy agency, the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW). These departures follow the earlier exit of an officer described by India as a rogue agent involved in a foiled scheme to murder Pannun in New York.
However, the Bloomberg report clarified that the five men arrested in Brampton have not been charged with conspiring to kill anyone at the wedding, and the gun charges have not yet been proven in court. The report did note, however, that the timing of the arrests and the expected presence of Pannun at the wedding “raise the possibility that he was a target”.
Pannun ultimately declined the wedding invitation at the last minute. In an interview with Bloomberg, he expressed frustration with Canadian authorities’ silence on the matter. “By not uncovering or by not disclosing, they are letting the Indian agents operate with impunity in Canada. They feel there are no consequences for the crimes they are committing,” Pannun said.