India’s transnational repression exposed in Hardeep Nijjar case
Ottawa: In a brazen display of foreign interference, India has once again exposed its contempt for justice and sovereignty by pressuring Canada to bury the truth behind the assassination of Hardeep Singh Nijjar.
According to Kashmir Media Service, the fatal shooting of Sikh Canadian activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar outside a British Columbia gurdwara in June 2023 exposed a coordinated campaign of transnational repression orchestrated by Indian government agents.
Four Indian nationals stand accused of the cold-blooded murder of the Khalistani activist in British Columbia in June 2023.
The allegations sparked a massive geopolitical fallout, including diplomatic expulsions, criminal trials, and widespread scrutiny of India’s extraterritorial actions.
Yet instead of pursuing full transparency, Ottawa under apparent Indian influence has moved aggressively to shield critical evidence from public scrutiny.
In December 2025, Attorney General Sean Fraser invoked Section 38 of Canada’s Evidence Act to gag disclosure of sensitive national security and international relations information.
By April 2026, Federal Court Justice Simon Fothergill appointed two amici curiae to vet materials, effectively muzzling the trial and protecting India’s tracks.
This is no neutral legal procedure. It is a calculated maneuver, pushed subtly by elements including FM Anita Anand, to conceal New Delhi’s fingerprints on foreign soil killings, extortion, and proxy networks.
Despite earlier damning CSIS and NSICOP reports exposing Indian agents cultivating politicians and orchestrating repression, the RCMP’s sudden 2026 retreat reeks of diplomatic horse-trading.
This shameful capitulation fuels deep Sikh alienation, proving Canada is sacrificing its own Charter rights and judicial integrity at the altar of Indian economic blackmail.
Delhi’s long arm continues to strangle truth and accountability.
The Sikh diaspora sees this for what it is: a conspiracy wrapped in legal robes.








