“The revival is being handled from Canada and Pakistan by involving the narco-terror ring that is run by Indo-Canadian gangsters who operate out of Canada.”
The death and the popularity of Punjabi singer Shubhdeep Singh Sidhu or Sidhu Moose Wala has turned into the last attempt to revive the defunct Khalistani movement, according to Indian agencies. The revival is being handled from Canada and Pakistan by involving the narco-terror ring that is run by Indo-Canadian gangsters who operate out of Canada, reported sundayguardianlive.
Indian agencies have been tracking the links of Moose Wala with the Indo-Canadian criminal network, which has penetrated and is entrenched deeply within the Canadian law enforcement, including its intelligence agencies.
Indian officials, who spoke to The Sunday Guardian recently, said that the operations of generating income through drugs by selling that to Indians and sending the drugs to European countries as well as using these Indo-Canadian drug cartels to revive the now defunct Khalistan sentiment have turned out to be biggest concerns for Indian security agencies and now even bigger than what they faced from the traditional anti-India agencies in Pakistan.
According to these agencies, those who have “pro-Khalistan” sentiments, are now exercising significant influence inside Canada’s government offices because of the electoral power that some in their community wield in that country.
Apart from the radical elements, descendants of Pakistani Army officials, who migrated to Canada in the latter part of 1900 and were now naturalised Canadian citizens, held important posts in different of offices in Canada and were nurturing, protecting and expanding the narco-terrorism ring that operated from Canada, and which has now become the biggest hub for sending drugs to European countries and the United Kingdom.
The actual consignments of these drugs are not allowed to enter Canada. “The money is being rolled out from Canada for procurement of drugs from Afghanistan. Then the drugs reach other countries including India from where they are sent to European countries. The issue has been raised at the government to government level but because the administrative setup in Ottawa is sympathetic to these cartels, nothing happens,” a senior official, with one of the agencies in Delhi required to keep an eye on narco-terrorism and its ramifications, told The Sunday Guardian.
“The damaging ramifications of giving harbour to these narco-terror leaders, will sooner rather than later, be felt by the very Canadian politicians who are protecting them now. It is a matter of record with every country that is affected by these drug cartels that Canada has become a hub of moving drugs from one country to the other. Not now, not five years later, but soon Canada will be on the dubious list of countries like Afghanistan and Pakistan that support narco-terror groups if the officials there don’t wake up to the land mines that they are sitting on,” an Indian agency official was quoted saying in the report.
******************************************************
Readers
These are extraordinary times. All of us have to rely on high-impact, trustworthy journalism. And this is especially true of the Indian Diaspora. Members of the Indian community overseas cannot be fed with inaccurate news.
Pravasi Samwad is a venture that has no shareholders. It is the result of an impassioned initiative of a handful of Indian journalists spread around the world. We have taken the small step forward with the pledge to provide news with accuracy, free from political and commercial influence. Our aim is to keep you, our readers, informed about developments at ‘home’ and across the world that affect you.
Please help us to keep our journalism independent and free.
In these difficult times, to run a news website requires finances. While every contribution, big or small, will makes a difference, we request our readers to put us in touch with advertisers worldwide. It will be a great help.
For more information: pravasisamwad00@gmail.com