Has Canada Bought Into the Reputation Cooked Up for Amit Shah by the Indian Media?

The intelligence establishment in Ottawa can be excused for locating in the Indian home minister’s political DNA an eagerness to move beyond conventional “dos and don’ts”, an appetite for risk and recklessness.

Four days after he was officially “outed” by a Canadian minister as the prime mover in this whole unpleasant business of alleged Indian involvement in the killing of a Canadian citizen on the Canadian soil, the Indian government has rather belatedly spoken up in defence of Union home minister Amit Shah.

The Ministry of External Affairs has expectedly termed the Canadian charge as “absurd and baseless.” Our official view is that the Justin Trudeau regime is indulging in India-bashing because of its domestic political agenda. Perhaps there is substance to the Indian understanding of Canadian domestic politics. Yet, it needs to be asked why a responsible Canadian ministerial official would allow himself to “finger” Shah, that too before a parliamentary committee.  If Indian officials are correctly reading  Trudeau’s political and electoral calculus, then his petty domestic imperatives have already been served by the grand diplomatic hoo-ha between New Delhi and Ottawa. Naming the third most powerful political figure [ as per the latest India Today list] still does not add up. Why this extreme, precipitous step?

Could it be that the Canadian intelligence establishment has been taken in by the reputation cooked up for Amit Shah by the Indian media? Even before he moved to Delhi in 2014, a friendly Gujarati press had hailed him as the mastermind behind Chief Minister Narendra Modi’s signature political moves, within and outside the BJP. His “take-no-prisoner” approach against political rivals and allies got easily shoe-horned into the “law and order” sector.  The whole Sohrabuddin/Kausar Bi caper revealed Amit Shah as an activist, hands-on home minister. Along with chief minister Modi, home minister Amit Shah was serenaded for ridding Gujarat of all those difficult “underworld figures” who had supposedly prospered over the years because of  “appeasement” politics. In the post-9/11 “global war on terrorism”, there was subtle appreciation for all those police and political officials who were prepared to employ unorthodox methods against the presumed “jihadis.”    

All these “facts” probably figured in the profile of Amit Shah that the Canadians had compiled, as a matter of routine, of an up and coming Indian politician.  The profile had to be necessarily updated and nuanced when he moved to Delhi in 2014 to work as Modi’s empowered consigliere. A fawning media ramped up his reputation as a new Chanakaya in the BJP as the ruling party rewrote the rules of political engagement with domestic rivals. “Naya Bharat” was not to be constrained by the old, conventional political morality of the Vajpayee era.

The Canadians must have surely revised Amit Shah’s profile when Prime Minister Modi allotted him the corner office in North Block in 2019. A servile media showered him with encomiums when he “did away” with Article 370. Amit Shah’s reputation as a man who did not care for any norms or conventions or traditions was now cast in stone. Journalists vied with each other to manufacture his image as a man who not only had the complete confidence of his boss but who believes that “power” must be used to consolidate and entrench oneself. Strategy and tactics came naturally to him; he was always in his zone. The media was in thrall of Shah; even our judges and generals and bureaucrats fell for this exaggerated image of a consummate power player. The Canadians, and most probably their big brothers in Washington too, could not be impervious to this concocted portrait.

Perhaps Canadian diplomats stationed in New Delhi also heard from serving and retired Indian police officers praising Amit Shah as the boss who was unafraid of the consequences, however unpleasant, if  a course of action was deemed to be in the “national interest.” Senior police officers came away impressed with his determined eagerness to move beyond conventional “dos and don’ts” of the lawful exercise of authority. He was definitely not a man who would allow himself to be dissuaded from going after an “enemy” by some ‘Western’ notions of accountability and statesmanship. Here was a man of certainties and convictions, a man who knew what he believed and what he was doing. Policemen, bureaucrats, foreign service-wallahs, and generals found him a refreshing contrast to all his predecessors who allowed themselves to be hobbled by bureaucratic rules and by considerations of political fair-play. This admiration must have wafted into the ears of Delhi-based Canadian diplomats.

The Canadian intelligence establishment can be excused for locating in Amit Shah’s political DNA an appetite for risk and recklessness. Does this mean he would be so reckless as to get involved in “encounters” on Canadian soil? Notwithstanding Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s campaign-time hyperbole that “ye  naya Bharat dushman ko ghar me ghoos kar marta hai”[ the new India goes after its enemies in their homes], Indian constitutional arrangements stand in the way, as does our collective aversion to any kind of “rogue” exercise of power at home or abroad. All spy agencies across the world know the limits of New Delhi’s coercive power outside of India.

So far, the Canadians have not produced a smoking gun to back their allegations against Amit Shah, which have inadvertently enhanced his reputation as a man not to be easily trifled with. Until and unless they do so, the mystery of why the intelligence and political bosses in Ottawa pointed a finger at him will remain.

Whatever the truth of the matter, this very public diplomatic spat should serve as a reminder to everyone that Deng Xiaoping’s axiom, “Hide your strength, bide your time,” applies to New Delhi too. As an aspiring power, India will need to appreciate that over-reach is not without its consequences.

 

 

BJP’s Poll Promises for Jharkhand: Tribals Exempt from UCC, Action Against ‘Infiltrators’

Union home minister Amit Shah once again raised the rhetoric of Bangladeshi infiltrators in Jharkhand and accused the ruling Jharkhand Mukti Morcha of allowing it.

New Delhi: Implementation of a Uniform Civil Code that would leave out tribals, return of tribal land allegedly occupied by “infiltrators”, no tribal status to children of “infiltrators” marrying tribals – these are some of the promises made by Union home minister Amit Shah in Ranchi as he released the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)’s Sankalp Patra or poll manifesto for the upcoming Jharkhand elections.

The launch was attended by BJP’s Jharkhand co in-charges Assam chief minister Himanta Biswa Sarma and Union minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan along with Sanjay Seth and BJP Jharkhand president and former chief minister Babulal Marandi. The saffron party placed the tribal community at the centre of its promises while once again raising the bogey of infiltration. Tribal communities form about 27% of the state’s population.

“Infiltrators lure our tribal sisters and daughters in Jharkhand, marry them and grab their land in return. We promise you that we will bring such a law that tribal land will not be transferred to the name of any intruder and those who have grabbed it will have to return it,” said Shah in his address announcing the party’s poll promises.

In addition to promising that tribal lands allegedly occupied by infiltrators will be reclaimed and returned, the party has also promised that the children of such infiltrators marrying tribals will not be granted tribal status.

“The tribal population is decreasing throughout Jharkhand because Bangladeshi infiltrators are coming here. The Hemant Soren government filed an affidavit in the high court saying that “We [JMM government] do not want to stop infiltration.” Champai Soren opposed this and left JMM and joined the BJP. You form a BJP government here, we will drive out the infiltrators from Jharkhand,” he added.

In the run-up to the Jharkhand assembly elections, BJP leaders including Shah, Sarma and Prime Minister Narendra Modi have alleged in their poll speeches that population of “Bangladeshi infiltrators” is increasing in Jharkhand at the behest of the ruling Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM) government.

“They have never let Adivasis advance. They are preparing a new vote bank in Jharkhand…The Santhal Parganas are a living example of this. Here, Adivasi residents are constantly decreasing and infiltrators’ numbers are increasing consistently,” said Modi at a speech in Hazaribagh on October 2.

“Such a quick change in the demography signals a decline in the population of Adivasis and Hindus. Are you able to see this change in Jharkhand or not? Has the number of Bangladeshi infiltrators increased rapidly or not?”

Earlier in September, Bangladesh had lodged a protest note with India over similar comments made by Shah.

On Saturday, the INDIA bloc, which includes the JMM, Congress, Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD), and CPI(ML) wrote to the chief electoral officer in Jharkhand against similar statements amounting to hate speech made by Sarma in his poll rallies.

While the BJP has been pushing towards the implementation of a Uniform Civil Code (UCC) across the country, in a bid to blunt criticism around how such a code will affect tribal rights and laws, the party has promised that such a code will exempt the tribal community in the state.

“UCC will definitely be brought in Jharkhand. But our government will exempt Adivasi from [its] ambit, and none of their rights or laws will be affected by it,” said Shah.

In addition to this, the party has promised a monthly payment of Rs 2,100 to women across the state and LPG cylinders at Rs 500 including two free cylinders per year.

Following the release of the BJP’s poll manifesto, Sarma reiterated the “infiltrator” rhetoric to reporters and urged the people of Jharkhand to stay united.

“If we stay united we will stay safe. Infiltrators come to Jharkhand, who have endangered the identity of our tribal society and Hindu society. Rahul Gandhi has made continuous efforts to divide the Hindu society. This is the time to stay united. If you stay united, you will be safe, otherwise, the infiltrators will snatch away your – roti, mati, beti (food, land and daughter) – all three will be snatched away from you,” he said.

After the release of the manifesto, the Congress alleged that communalism is the only campaign issue of the BJP.

“From the manifesto it has released for Jharkhand today, it is clear that the BJP has only one campaign issue: polarisation and the spread of the communal virus,” said Congress MP and general secretary media and communications in-charge Jairam Ramesh.

“The language of the Union home minister who released the manifesto, and that of its campain-in-charge – the Assam chief minister – makes it abundantly clear that the BJP has simply no answer to the extremely popular and impactful schemes of the JMM-INC government in the state. It will depend only on the spread of bigotry, prejudice, and the incitement of hatred in the name of religion.”

India Calls References to Amit Shah’s ‘Involvement’ in Plot to Attack Khalistanis ‘Absurd, Baseless’

India also formally protested after some consular officials in Canada were informed that they were under audio and video surveillance.

New Delhi: India has lodged strong protest against Canada and warned of serious consequences for bilateral ties after Canadian deputy foreign affairs minister David Morrison said earlier this week that he had confirmed to a US newspaper that Indian home minister Amit Shah was “involved” in a plot to kill Canadian nationals.

The external affairs ministry summoned Canada’s acting deputy high commissioner Geoffrey Dean on Friday (November 1) and handed him a diplomatic note protesting Morrison’s statements as “absurd” and “baseless”.

“We had summoned the representative of the Canadian high commission yesterday. A diplomatic note was handed over in reference to the proceedings of the Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security in Ottawa on October 29, 2024. It was conveyed in the note that the government of India protests in the strongest terms to the absurd and baseless references made to the Union home minister of India before the committee by deputy minister David Morrison,” external affairs ministry spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said at a press briefing on Saturday.

“In fact, the revelation that high Canadian officials deliberately leak unfounded insinuations to the international media as part of a conscious strategy to discredit India and influence other nations only confirms the view [the] government of India has long held about [the] current Canadian government’s political agenda and behavioural pattern. Such irresponsible actions will have serious consequences for bilateral ties.”

Morrison on Tuesday made the disclosure at a hearing by the Canadian parliamentary committee on public safety and national security. It came amid a widening diplomatic row between the two countries and a year after Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau alleged that agents of the Indian government were involved in the killing of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a pro-Khalistan Canadian national proscribed as a terrorist by India.

The Washington Post on October 14 had cited unnamed Canadian officials as saying they had told the Indian government that “conversations and texts among Indian diplomats” ordered out of the country that day “include references” to Shah and a senior official in the Research and Analysis Wing “who have authorised … intelligence-gathering missions and attacks on Sikh separatists” in Canada.

Jaiswal said that India also formally protested after some consular officials in Canada were informed by the Canadian government that they were under audio and video surveillance.

“Some of our consular officials were recently informed by the Canadian government that they have been and continue to be under audio and video surveillance. Their communications have also been intercepted. We have formally protested to the Canadian government as we deem these actions to be a flagrant violation of relevant diplomatic and consular conventions,” he said.

“By citing technicalities, the Canadian government cannot justify the fact that it is indulging in harassment and intimidation. Our diplomatic and consular personnel are already functioning in an environment of extremism and violence. This action of the Canadian government aggravates the situation and is incompatible with established diplomatic norms and practices.”

In response to a Canadian cyber security report from earlier this week, the external affairs ministry said that it “appears to be another example of a Canadian strategy to attack India”.

“As I mentioned earlier, their senior officials have openly confessed that they are seeking to manipulate global opinion against India. As on other occasions, imputations are made without any evidence,” Jaiswal said.

Canada’s cybersecurity report said: “We assess that Indian state-sponsored cyber threat actors likely conduct cyber threat activity against government of Canada networks for the purpose of espionage. We judge that official bilateral relations between Canada and India will very likely drive Indian state-sponsored cyber threat activity against Canada.”

Jaiswal said that the atmosphere in Canada has “reached high levels of intolerance and extremism” after reports of the cancellation of Diwali celebrations at the Parliament House in Ottawa.

“We have seen some reports in this regard. It is unfortunate that the prevailing atmosphere in Canada has reached high levels of intolerance and extremism,” he said.

In recent weeks, the diplomatic row between India and Canada widened after the two countries expelled six diplomats each, including their top envoys.

India on October 14 announced that Canada had informed it that six of its diplomats, including high commissioner Sanjay Kumar Verma, were “persons of interests” in a criminal investigation.

The Indian external affairs ministry summoned the Canadian charge d’affaires to announce that New Delhi was withdrawing the six diplomats and declaring six Canadian diplomats personae non gratae.

At that same time, Canada also stated that expulsion notices had been given to the six Indian diplomats in Ottawa.

On the same day, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police held a press briefing to say that its investigations went beyond the Nijjar killing and involved evidence of Indian diplomats allegedly using members of jailed gangster Lawrence Bishnoi’s gang in criminally intimidating Canadian nationals of Indian origin.

Amit Shah and Ajit Doval in Tussle Over Control of NTRO

The incumbent, Arun Sinha, has been given another extension as technical intelligence chief following a stalemate over names moved by the PMO and Union home ministry.

New Delhi: A quiet battle is brewing between North Block and South Block – between the Union home ministry and the Prime Minister’s Office – and round one has ended in a tie. The tug of war is over the appointment of a new chief of the National Technical Research Organisation, helmed at the moment by Arun Sinha, a Kerala cadre Indian Police Service officer.

Sinha, who is on a six-month extension and was to retire on October 31, has got another lease of two months, up to December 31.

The NTRO, India’s technical intelligence wing, reports to the National Security Council headed by national security adviser Ajit Doval in the PMO. But the home ministry headed by Amit Shah has been trying to get a foot in the NSA’s door.

Last month, the PMO returned the file of Central Reserve Police Force chief Anish Dayal Singh, whose candidature was allegedly being pushed by the home ministry and whose appointment was considered a done deal. “The file was returned without a comment so as not to put the differences between the two on record. Now new names will have to be considered afresh,” a source said.

This was round two.

Round one began in September last year when two names were recommended by Doval’s NSC: Manoj Yadava, chief of the Railway Protection Force, and Rashmi Ranjan Swain, who was then special director general, CID, Jammu and Kashmir.

Sources said the home ministry refused to relieve Yadava on the ground that the officer was indispensable. Yadava, a former chief of Haryana police, had moved back on central deputation to the IB after a falling-out with Anil Vij, the state’s home minister at the time.

Swain, a 1991 batch officer of the erstwhile Jammu and Kashmir cadre who had served for 15 years in RAW, was indispensable too, the home ministry said. The following month, Swain was handed additional charge as director-general of police, Jammu and Kashmir, when Dilbagh Singh retired on October 31. He was confirmed in the post this August and retired last month.

The committee that vets names for the key position comprises the cabinet secretary, a representative each of the NSA, the Research and Analysis Wing, the Intelligence Bureau, the home secretary and secretary, oOPT.

With Doval’s preferred candidates out of the fray, Shah’s home ministry recently pushed the candidature of Anish Dayal Singh. Only to have it blocked by the PMO.

Approved in 2004, in the wake of the 1999 Kargil War, the NTRO is the agency tasked with running India’s technical intelligence capabilities. But the organisation is not viewed to be in great health. A first attempt at auditing an intelligence agency to bring accountability and transparency was initiated by the UPA government in 2010, when the NTRO was audited by the Comptroller and Auditor General. Once the BJP came to power in 2014, nothing much came of the initiative.

Now, sources say, the PMO is looking for a technocrat to turn the agency around. It was decided last year that the NTRO would no longer be a post-retirement sinecure and that a serving officer would be at the helm. Arun Sinha was acting chairman of NTRO for some time before he was made full-time chairman to fulfil administrative requirements. The NTRO chief’s tenure is for five years.

Now the next two months will likely decide who blinks first.

Calls and text messages to Doval, Arun Sinha, and officials of the home ministry and the IB, to seek their response, went unanswered.

This isn’t the first time the home ministry has been in the crosshairs of other ministries. In 2022, the finance ministry dug its heels in against a proposal of the MHA to take control of the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act 1985. At present, while the Union home ministry governs the Narcotics Control Bureau, the department of revenue in the finance ministry administers and makes policies under the NDPS Act. The finance ministry said the proposal had not been “thought through” and after much to-and-fro, the move was shelved.

 

‘System Attempt to Create New Nurseries of Hate’: Retired Bureaucrats Write to Amit Shah on Communal Unrest in Uttarakhand

‘The plan seems to be to make Uttarakhand a template for similar strategies to be employed elsewhere in the country, in all places that have so far resisted such majoritarian aggression.’

New Delhi: A group of over 100 retired civil servants have written to Union home minister Amit Shah on how government conduct has fomented communal hostility and violence, particularly in some north Indian states.

The pattern of hostility, especially in Uttarakhand, has ominous portends, says the letter. The former bureaucrats under the Constitutional Conduct Group noted that Uttarakhand’s traditions of peace and environmental activism had not had the faintest hint of majoritarian aggression until a few years ago.

Taking note of communal events that have made things worse in the state, the group has observed that a vicious cycle of lawlessness is afoot where even those who are out on bail for fomenting hatred, flout their bail conditions with impunity.

The full text of the letter is below.

§

28 October 2024

To
Shri Amit Shah,
Hon’ble Home Minister of India

Honourable Home Minister of India,

As you probably know, we, the members of the Constitutional Conduct Group of former civil servants, have frequently expressed our views on the systematic erosion in recent years of constitutional values in public policy, governance and politics. This erosion has been most evident in the way the authorities have dealt with situations of communal conflict. More often than not, the conduct of several governments has led to communal hostility and violence with the involvement of those elements in society that sustain themselves ideologically on the politics of majoritarian hate, exclusion and division. The rise of such elements has been particularly noticeable in Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh and Rajasthan.

Today we write to you to express our alarm regarding recent developments in the state of Uttarakhand, a sensitive border state long known for its traditions of peace, harmony and environmental activism and which, until a few years ago, had never displayed even the faintest hint of majoritarian aggression and belligerence. In fact, given its long history of being a sanctuary for spiritual and philosophical pursuits of diverse faiths and traditions, the coexistence of different communities and their close relationship with one another was seen as normal and natural.

The wilful injection of communal poison into the body politic of Uttarakhand in recent years has been part of a systematic attempt to create new nurseries of hate which can change the syncretic, pluralistic and peaceful character of the region and make it into a breeding ground for an aggressive, militarised and bigoted version of Hindutva, permanently engaged in deepening the cleavage between communities. It is an attempt to force the minorities to live in a state of permanent fear and come to accept a premise that they are subordinate to the dominant Hindu majority. The plan seems to be to make Uttarakhand a template for similar strategies to be employed elsewhere in the country, in all places that have so far resisted such majoritarian aggression.

A pattern is beginning to emerge in Uttarakhand which has very ominous portends:

  • On September 10, 2024, a hate speech was made in the Dehradun Press Club claiming that a “dharma sansad” will be organised in December 2024. It may be recalled that a “dharma sansad” was organized in Haridwar in December 2021, in which a series of genocidal speeches demanded the mass killings and mass rape of Indian Muslims. The call for another “dharma sansad” has now been made by many of the same individuals and Hindus have been asked to arm themselves and treat members of the minority community as “enemies of humanity”.
  • The announcement on September 10, 2024 was made against the background of a series of carefully organised incidents of hate inspired violence in the state.  Since August 12, 2024, hate speeches and violent attacks have occurred in Chauras (near Kirti Nagar), Dehradun, Srinagar, Berinag, Uttarkashi, Karnaprayag, Nandnagar (Chamoli), Tharali (Chamoli), Tilwada, Gauchar (Chamoli), Sonprayag, Haldwani and several other locations in the state.  Properties have been damaged and, reportedly, minority families have been forced to flee from their Boards have been put up banning business by Muslim and non-Hindu vendors. A small handful of individuals and organisations – including those involved in the 2021 “dharma sansad” – are responsible for the majority of these incidents. (As per our information, these are just five individuals and two organisations, viz. Bajrang Dal and Rashtriya Seva Sangathan).
  • There are ongoing calls for “mahapanchayats” to be held, which are used as a means to stoke communal violence and demand the economic boycott and expulsion of Muslim residents. We are informed that those who instigated the violence in Uttarkashi on October 24, 2024 have announced that they are going to call a mahapanchayat on November 4, 2024.
  • In the vast majority of incidents, past and present, those responsible for false inflammatory allegations of “love jihad”, hate speech or property destruction have not even been detained. Even where a few arrests were made, most of those have been given bail including the notorious repeat offender and the main organiser of the 2021 event – Yati Narsinghanand.
  • When on bail, the accused flagrantly violate their bail conditions with the police remaining completely unconcerned. No attempts are made to cancel their bail.
  • In a particularly disturbing incident on September 27, 2024, the Dehradun police detained a repeat offender for being implicated in a violent communal clash that resulted in damage to trains as well as several private vehicles. However, his supporters were then permitted to block the main intersection of the city, call for a bandh in the main bazaar, deliver hate speeches openly and hold a celebratory parade after the main offender was “freed”.
  • On September 19, 2024, 53 women’s and civil society groups from 18 states wrote an open letter to the Uttarakhand Governor condemning the manner in which women’s safety was being endangered, and complained of the police being partisan.  They noted that while some members of the minority community have been physically attacked and publicly blamed for crimes against women, in the case of people close to the ruling party who are the real perpetrators of such violence, the police have gone slow, tried to weaken the case against them and have even attempted to pressurise the victims to withdraw their complaints.

We applaud the fact that some district officials and police officers have adopted an even-handed approach, registered suo motu FIRs, and on some occasions prevented large scale violence from spreading.  But these attempts have been sporadic and insufficient in the face of a larger concerted attempt to raise the communal temperature, with the authorities either being complicit, or apathetic and ineffective. We have raised this concern with the state government thrice since June 2023, but we see no change in the overall pattern.

Against this sombre backdrop, we have reason to fear that if this ongoing campaign is not stopped, and if the proposed “dharma sansad” is permitted, this sensitive border state may spiral into a vicious cycle of organised violence with serious implications not just for internal peace and public order but for national security.

We therefore request your urgent intervention to ensure that:

    • Communally charged events such as the proposed mahapanchayat in Uttarkashi on November 4, 2024 and the proposed “dharma sansad” in December 2024 are not permitted; action should be taken against those attempting to use such events to foment hate and incite violence.
    • The Uttarakhand police should be asked why they have failed to seek cancellation of bail in cases of violation of bail conditions, by Yati Narsinghanand and others. In fact, we feel Yati Narsinghanand should be arrested under the National Security Act for his attempts to disrupt public order.
    • The Uttarakhand police should be asked to take strict action against all incidents of violence and hate speech, as per the law, the directions of the Supreme Court, and constitutional propriety.

We reiterate that we, as a group, have no affiliation with any political party or group and that our request is motivated entirely by our concern that a State known for its traditions of peace, tranquillity and civic harmony should not degenerate into becoming yet another arena for communal conflict and public disorder to serve narrow political and sectarian ends. 

Satyameva jayate.

Yours faithfully,

Constitutional Conduct Group

1. Anand Arni RAS (Retd.) Former Special Secretary, Cabinet Secretariat, GoI
2. Aruna Bagchee IAS (Retd.) Former Joint Secretary, Ministry of Mines, GoI
3. Sandeep Bagchee IAS (Retd.) Former Principal Secretary, Govt. of Maharashtra
4. G. Balachandhran IAS (Retd.) Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal
5. Vappala Balachandran IPS (Retd.) Former Special Secretary, Cabinet Secretariat, GoI
6. Gopalan Balagopal IAS (Retd.) Former Special Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal
7. Chandrashekar Balakrishnan IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Coal, GoI
8. Sushant Baliga Engineering Services (Retd.) Former Additional Director General, Central PWD, GoI
9. Rana Banerji RAS (Retd.) Former Special Secretary, Cabinet Secretariat, GoI
10. T.K. Banerji IAS (Retd.) Former Member, Union Public Service Commission
11. Sharad Behar IAS (Retd.) Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of Madhya Pradesh
12. Aurobindo Behera IAS (Retd.) Former Member, Board of Revenue, Govt. of Odisha
13. Madhu Bhaduri IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to Portugal
14. Pradip Bhattacharya IAS (Retd.) Former Additional Chief Secretary, Development & Planning and Administrative Training Institute, Govt. of West Bengal
15. Nutan Guha Biswas IAS (Retd.) Former Member, Police Complaints Authority, Govt. of NCT of Delhi
16. Ravi Budhiraja IAS (Retd.) Former Chairman, Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust, GoI
17. Sundar Burra IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Govt. of Maharashtra
18. Maneshwar Singh Chahal IAS (Retd.) Former Principal Secretary, Home, Govt. of Punjab
19. R. Chandramohan IAS (Retd.) Former Principal Secretary, Transport and Urban Development, Govt. of NCT of Delhi
20. Rachel Chatterjee IAS (Retd.) Former Special Chief Secretary, Agriculture, Govt. of Andhra Pradesh
21. Kalyani Chaudhuri IAS (Retd.) Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal
22. Gurjit Singh Cheema IAS (Retd.) Former Financial Commissioner (Revenue), Govt. of Punjab
23. F.T.R. Colaso IPS (Retd.) Former Director General of Police, Govt. of Karnataka & former Director General of Police, Govt. of Jammu & Kashmir
24. Anna Dani IAS (Retd.) Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of Maharashtra
25. Vibha Puri Das IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Ministry of Tribal Affairs, GoI
26. P.R. Dasgupta IAS (Retd.) Former Chairman, Food Corporation of India, GoI
27. Pradeep K. Deb IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Deptt. Of Sports, GoI
28. Nitin Desai Former Chief Economic Adviser, Ministry of Finance, GoI
29. M.G. Devasahayam IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Govt. of Haryana
30. Kiran Dhingra IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Ministry of Textiles, GoI
31. Sushil Dubey IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to Sweden
32. A.S. Dulat IPS (Retd.) Former OSD on Kashmir, Prime Minister’s Office, GoI
33. Prabhu Ghate IAS (Retd.) Former Addl. Director General, Department of Tourism, GoI
34. Suresh K. Goel IFS (Retd.) Former Director General, Indian Council of Cultural Relations, GoI
35. S.K. Guha IAS (Retd.) Former Joint Secretary, Department of Women & Child Development, GoI
36. H.S. Gujral IFoS (Retd.) Former Principal Chief Conservator of Forests, Govt. of Punjab
37. Meena Gupta IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Ministry of Environment & Forests, GoI
38. Ravi Vira Gupta IAS (Retd.) Former Deputy Governor, Reserve Bank of India
39. Vivek Harinarain IAS (Retd.) Govt. of Tamil Nadu
40. Sajjad Hassan IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Govt. of Manipur
41. Siraj Hussain IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Department of Agriculture, GoI
42. Kamal Jaswal IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Department of Information Technology, GoI
43. Najeeb Jung IAS (Retd.) Former Lieutenant Governor, Delhi
44. Vinod C. Khanna IFS (Retd.) Former Additional Secretary, MEA, GoI
45. Gita Kripalani IRS (Retd.) Former Member, Settlement Commission, GoI
46. Sudhir Kumar IAS (Retd.) Former Member, Central Administrative Tribunal
47. Subodh Lal IPoS (Resigned) Former Deputy Director General, Ministry of Communications, GoI
48. Sandip Madan  IAS (Resigned) Former Secretary, Himachal Pradesh Public Service Commission
49. Harsh Mander IAS (Retd.) Govt. of Madhya Pradesh
50. Amitabh Mathur IPS (Retd.) Former Special Secretary, Cabinet Secretariat, GoI
51. Aditi Mehta IAS (Retd.) Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of Rajasthan
52. Avinash Mohananey IPS (Retd.) Former Director General of Police, Govt. of Sikkim
53. Satya Narayan Mohanty IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary General, National Human Rights Commission
54. Sudhansu Mohanty IDAS (Retd.) Former Financial Adviser (Defence Services), Ministry of Defence, GoI
55. Ruchira Mukerjee IP&TAFS (Retd.) Former Advisor (Finance), Telecom Commission, GoI
56. Deb Mukharji IFS (Retd.) Former High Commissioner to Bangladesh and former Ambassador to Nepal
57. Jayashree Mukherjee IAS (Retd.) Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of Maharashtra
58. Shiv Shankar Mukherjee IFS (Retd.) Former High Commissioner to the United Kingdom
59. Gautam Mukhopadhaya IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to Myanmar
60. Nagalsamy IA&AS (Retd.) Former Principal Accountant General, Tamil Nadu & Kerala
61. P. Joy Oommen IAS (Retd.) Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of Chhattisgarh
62. Amitabha Pande IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Inter-State Council, GoI
63. Maxwell Pereira IPS (Retd.) Former Joint Commissioner of Police, Delhi
64. G.K. Pillai IAS (Retd.) Former Home Secretary, GoI
65. Gurnihal Singh Pirzada IAS (Resigned) Former MD, Punjab State Electronic Development & Production Corporation, Govt. of Punjab
66. R. Poornalingam IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Ministry of Textiles, GoI
67. Rajesh Prasad IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to the Netherlands
68. R.M. Premkumar IAS (Retd.) Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of Maharashtra
69. N.K. Raghupathy IAS (Retd.) Former Chairman, Staff Selection Commission, GoI
70. V.P. Raja IAS (Retd.) Former Chairman, Maharashtra Electricity Regulatory Commission
71. V. Ramani IAS (Retd.) Former Director General, YASHADA, Govt. of Maharashtra
72. K. Sujatha Rao IAS (Retd.) Former Health Secretary, GoI
73. Madhukumar Reddy A. IRTS (Retd.) Former Principal Executive Director, Railway Board, GoI
74. Satwant Reddy IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Chemicals and Petrochemicals, GoI
75. Julio Ribeiro IPS (Retd.) Former Director General of Police, Govt. of Punjab
76. Aruna Roy IAS (Resigned)
77. Manabendra N. Roy IAS (Retd.) Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal
78. A.K. Samanta IPS (Retd.) Former Director General of Police (Intelligence), Govt. of West Bengal
79. Deepak Sanan IAS (Retd.) Former Principal Adviser (AR) to Chief Minister, Govt. of Himachal Pradesh
80. G.V. Venugopala Sarma IAS (Retd.) Former Member, Board of Revenue, Govt. of Odisha
81. S. Satyabhama IAS (Retd.) Former Chairperson, National Seeds Corporation, GoI
82. N.C. Saxena IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Planning Commission, GoI
83. Ardhendu Sen IAS (Retd.) Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal
84. Abhijit Sengupta IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Ministry of Culture, GoI
85. Aftab Seth IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to Japan
86. Ashok Kumar Sharma IFoS (Retd.) Former MD, State Forest Development Corporation, Govt. of Gujarat
87. Ashok Kumar Sharma IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to Finland and Estonia
88. Navrekha Sharma IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to Indonesia
89. Pravesh Sharma IAS (Retd.) Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of Madhya Pradesh
90. Raju Sharma IAS (Retd.) Former Member, Board of Revenue, Govt. of Uttar Pradesh
91. Rashmi Shukla Sharma IAS (Retd.) Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of Madhya Pradesh
92. Avay Shukla IAS (Retd.) Former Additional Chief Secretary (Forests & Technical Education), Govt. of Himachal Pradesh
93. Satyavir Singh IRS (Retd.) Former Chief Commissioner of Income Tax, GoI
94. Tara Ajai Singh IAS (Retd.) Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of Karnataka
95. Tirlochan Singh IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, National Commission for Minorities, GoI
96. A.K. Srivastava IAS (Retd.) Former Administrative Member, Madhya Pradesh Administrative Tribunal
97. Prakriti Srivastava IFoS (Retd.) Former Principal Chief Conservator of Forests & Special Officer, Rebuild Kerala Development Programme, Govt. of Kerala
98. Anup Thakur IAS (Retd.) Former Member, National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission
99. P.S.S. Thomas IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary General, National Human Rights Commission
100. Geetha Thoopal IRAS (Retd.) Former General Manager, Metro Railway, Kolkata
101. Rudi Warjri IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to Colombia, Ecuador and Costa Rica

 

In Bengal, Amit Shah Once Again Brings up ‘Infiltration From Bangladesh’

Earlier, in the run-up to the Lok Sabha elections in West Bengal, Shah had compared Bangladeshi immigrants to “termites”.

New Delhi: During his first visit to West Bengal after the BJP lost the majority of Lok Sabha seats it contested in the state, Union home minister Amit Shah claimed that “infiltration from Bangladesh” was disrupting peace in Bengal.

“Bring change to Bengal in 2026 (when Assembly polls are due)…(A BJP-led state government) will end infiltration and ensure peace in the state,” said Shah, reported The Telegraph.

“When there is no opportunity for legal (trans-border) movement of people… illegitimate methods of movement arise, which impacts the peace of the nation.… There can be peace in Bengal only after infiltration stops,” Shah added.

Earlier, in the run-up to the Lok Sabha elections in West Bengal, Shah had compared Bangladeshi immigrants to “termites” and had claimed that the BJP will win 35 of the 42 Lok Sabha seats in the state.

However, despite its polarising narrative, the saffron party could win only 12 seats, lesser than its 2019 tally of 18 seats.

Shah made the comments on Sunday (October 27) at Petrapole, which is a port on the Bangladesh border, where the Union home minister inaugurated a new passenger terminal and a cargo gate.

In September this year, Bangladesh had lodged a protest note with India over comments made by Shah regarding Bangladeshi nationals during a rally in Jharkhand.

Shah had accused the Hemant Soren government of allowing migrants – whom he called “infiltrators” – to take over the state at a rally in Shahganj. Jharkhand is set to hold assembly elections later this year.

“Infiltrators are the vote bank of Lalu Prasad’s RJD [Rashtriya Janata Dal], Rahul baba‘s [Rahul Gandhi] Congress and chief minister Hemant Soren’s Jharkhand Mukti Morcha. I promise to drive out illegal immigrants. The time has come to show the corrupt JMM dispensation the exit door…We want to change Jharkhand,” he had said.

Top BJP leaders have often been accused of using the “infiltration” narrative before elections for polarisation.

At a rally in Jharkhand’s Hazaribagh on Gandhi Jayanti, October 2, Prime Minister Narendra Modi claimed that the population of Hindus and Adivasis is declining and that of “Bangladeshi infiltrators” is increasing under the Jharkhand Mukti Morcha government.

Jharkhand is slated to go for assembly polls later this year.

 

Do Muslims Have the Right to Speak for Themselves?

Yes. If injustice is being done to you and you remain silent, waiting for others to stand with you, then you are abdicating your civic duty.

I was attending a meeting of an organisation working for civil rights. The first speaker pointed out to the organisers that most of the people sitting in the meeting were Muslims. He said that the organisation should try to include Hindus in it. Otherwise, he said, it seems that the struggle is only of Muslims and by Muslims. This makes it look narrow, he said. According to him, the meeting also did not seem complete or representative of the entire society, but only of one section – the Muslims. Then he said that it is not only the Muslim community whose rights are being violated. The rights of Dalits and Hindus are also being violated in many places. Attention needs to be paid to that too.

I kept thinking about this speech.

First, why does a meeting look incomplete or abnormal if the majority of the participants happen to be Muslims? Can we say the same about any meeting or gathering in which 99% are Hindus? At such a meeting, we do not ask why there are no Muslims or Sikhs or Christians in it. But if a meeting is 99% Muslim, then the absence of Hindus definitely stands out. And, if Muslims take any decision in such a meeting, then will that too be considered incomplete because Hindus are not included in it?

I should also make an admission. A few years ago, I was invited to Patna for a lecture. When I reached the hall, I came to know that 99% of the audience were Muslims. This fact struck me. Later, I kept thinking that in the dozens of meetings that we had held earlier at the same place, I had never thought that because almost 99% of the audience was Hindu, the attendance was strange.

I recount this because this way of thinking is not necessarily of those who are labeled as communal. Or to quote Asghar Ali Engineer, we can say that communalism is present in a very subtle way even in those who call themselves logical and secular. Our first reaction of accepting the presence of once community as ‘normal’ and another as not can tell us whether the communal bug is inside us or not.

The meeting in which the discussion was going on was on the question of civil or human rights. Is there a need to ask, today in India, as to which community is it whose rights in nearly all spheres of its life are being taken away? Whose houses and shops are being bulldozed? Whose places of worship are being attacked? Who is being arrested? Against whom are laws being made one after the other? Against whom is the major media of this country continuously spreading hateful propaganda? For whose genocide are slogans being raised openly? Which is the community that faces almost daily the threat of annihilation? Which community is subjected to hate campaigns relentlessly? The only honest answer is that it is the community of Muslims that is being attacked in an organised manner from all corners.

Is there any doubt that today the Union government of India and the governments of many states are in the hands of the Bharatiya Janata Party, which believes in and professes an anti-Muslim and anti-Christian ideology? Have we not seen for the last 10 years that in addition to the other political leaders of this party, even the prime minister incites anti-Muslim hatred in his rallies?

When houses are demolished, murders are committed, and hatred is bombarded, the victim will surely react. They will go to court, will have to hire lawyers and raise money for the bail of their arrested people. Others should stand with them. But should the victim wait until others realise their duty towards them?

This question was also raised when Muslims got together to protest against the new citizenship law. The amendment in the citizenship law and the announcement of the National Citizenship Register along with it created apprehension and fear among Muslims. In principle, this law was against the secular principle of India. Because of this, non-Muslims should also have opposed it. But it is also true that this law did not create apprehension and fear in Muslims. It was not without reason. Those who passed the law and implemented it were the people who never hide their anti-Muslim sentiments. It is true that after the publication of the NRC, it was found that more Hindus than Muslims were excluded from the register in Assam. But the government and the leaders said that they would get their place in the NRC and those who had been included would be thrown out. The message was clear. What is the ideological meaning and signalling of the NRC-CAA?

Those who were scared, those who felt afraid, came out on the streets. Many were Muslims. At some places, non-Muslims also joined them, but as we all know, Hindus did not feel any threat to their existence and their place in India from this law, so they were not exactly eager to join the protest. The Shaheen Bagh protests comprised mostly Muslim women. I was returning from one such protest in Pune. I asked the driver of the car if he had ever thought of joining it. The driver replied that it was ‘their’ problem. He was unable to understand the apprehension of the people sitting in the protest. It was a natural reaction, even if not appropriate. But what conclusion do we draw from this one incident? Is it that Muslims should have protested until others like the driver joined them?

Also watch: Central Hall | What Does It Mean to Be a Muslim in India Today?

When the Dalits felt that the The Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act was being diluted, they came out on the streets in protest. Non-Dalits were not there. But no one said that their protest was wrong or sectarian. It was not asked as to why only Dalits were protesting. They felt the sting of injustice and so they came out on the streets. Just like the ‘Black Lives Matter’ movement. It mainly had black people and was led by them. It was not asked why only black people were there, why were they leading it. Yes, people from other races also joined, but the blackness of the movement was prominent and not a problem.

When Hindus were attacked in Bangladesh, they came out on the streets to protest. Was that wrong? It is a different matter that a large number of Muslims were also with them. This cannot be said about the CAA movement. Hindus failed to appreciate the fear of Muslims. Should this fact be held against Muslims?

It is true that in India there are non-Muslims in courts and elsewhere fighting against the injustice against Muslims. Lawyers, human rights activists, journalists, intellectuals, students: we do see non-Muslims in these groups. But it should not be concluded from this that Muslims should not speak for their rights or against injustice against them if they are alone.

When Muslims protest, they use rights given to them in the constitution. They are not taking away anyone’s rights.

It would be good if others also join them and follow their civic duty. It is our duty as citizens to rise in solidarity with those who fight for their rights. But when even those political parties that win by the votes of Muslims are reluctant to be seen with them, then what should we expect from ordinary Hindus? Secular political parties cannot even pronounce the word “Muslim”. What are Muslims expected to do?

It is also not right to say that when Muslims speak with the same intensity against the injustice done to Dalits or women, only then will their own protest prove to be legitimate. Do farmers protest for the rights of workers every time? Do workers protest for farmers? Should they then lose their right to protest for themselves?

In a democracy, it is expected that we understand and feel the pain of others. That is civic sense. But if injustice is being done to you and you remain silent, waiting for others to stand with you, then you are abdicating your civic duty. If Muslims are speaking for themselves, then they are activating this civic sense in the society. By joining them, we prove our citizenship.

Apoorvanand is a professor of Hindi at Delhi University.

‘I See Myself Threatened’: Jignesh Mevani Writes to Amit Shah, Demands Gujarat IPS Officer’s Suspension

Mevani has sought an unconditional apology from Pandian to the Dalits of Gujarat and India.

New Delhi: In a letter written to Union Home Minister Amit Shah, Gujarat Congress MLA Jignesh Mevani has said that he sees himself “threatened” by Rajkumar Pandian an IPS officer in Gujarat.

Mevani, the Congress MLA from Vadgam assembly constituency in Gujarat, has requested Shah in the letter dated October 23 that Pandian be immediately suspended or terminated.

In the letter, Mevani mentions that on October 15, he visited Pandian, who is presently posted as the ADGP-SC/ST (Ahmedabad police) to represent the concerns of Dalits in Kutch district, whose land has been illegally upon for several years. Mevani was accompanied by Hitendra Pitadiya, Chairperson of the Congress SC Cell.

“As I entered the office of the ADGP, he very rudely and in a dismissive tone told Shri Pitadiya and I to keep our cell phones out. It was not a request; rather it was an order. He summoned the junior officer to take our cell phones outside his office. I inquired under what legal provision he was making this order,” Mevani has said in the letter to Shah.

Mevani added that thereafter he reminded ADGP Pandian that as a bureaucrat and in accordance with established protocol, he has to demonstrate courteous behaviour towards Mevani, who is an elected public representative.

After hearing this, Pandian told Mevani that the meeting was over, they could leave and there would be no appointments in future and that he will not be permitted to enter his office, Mevani has alleged in his letter. Mevani said that Pandian also reportedly commented on the former’s attire, stating that Mevani had come to meet him wearing a T shirt. Pandian’s intention was to intimidate and threaten him, says Mevani’s letter.

“With his behaviour, especially on the issue of land rights to Dalits, Rajkumar Pandian has not just misbehaved with an elected representative; more he has insulted the dignity, rights and esteem of 50 lakh Dalits in Gujarat. This is unquestionably unacceptable and intolerable,” Mevani has written in his letter to Shah.

“However, I must say that, keeping in mind the history of accusations against and consequential jail term undergone by Rajkumar Pandian (who was charged for a fake encounter under section 302 of the IPC, in jail for about 7 years, and subsequently discharged) I do see myself threatened. I am compelled to say that if any harm is done to me, my life and property and/or the life and property of my family, and to the life and property of Shri Hitendra Pitadiya, and/or the life and property of any of my team members/associates; in any such case, Rajkumar Pandian should be held responsible,” Mevani’s letter states.

Mevani has sought an unconditional apology from Pandian to the Dalits of Gujarat and India.

India, Canada and the Need for Quiet Diplomacy

The fact remains that the Indian government has been caught on the wrong foot both in Canada and America.

One need not be an international relations expert, nor a career diplomat, to understand where India has gone wrong in the ongoing Canada-India row over India’s alleged involvement in the murder of pro-Khalistan separatist Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a Canadian national, in the parking lot of the Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara at Surrey in Canada’s British Columbia province.

The prime minister of Canada, Justin Trudeau, has openly alleged that India’s external intelligence agency, RAW (Research and Analyses Wing), was complicit in the crime. America has seemingly bought the Canadian story which it tends to link with the attempted murder of another pro-Khalistan separatist, Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, an American national, on American soil. There is an uncanny similarity between the two events.

Considering that in power terms America and Canada do not match, India’s response, both official and popular, is diametrically opposite. Officially, India is vitriolic against Canada but completely guarded insofar as America is concerned, allowing the vitriol to be only released through pro-Bharatiya Janata Party journalists (the so-called ‘godi‘ media) and public intellectuals. The most common refrain of the latter is that Americans too, or for that matter all big powers, indulge in such adventurism on foreign soils. But this is the ABC of international relations. Comically, it amounts to the kind of logic a burglar may supply after stealing in a businessman’s house: Hasn’t the businessman also robbed his clients?

The fact remains that the Indian government has been caught on the wrong foot both in Canada and America.

Let us concentrate here only on the Canadian chapter. Here is a common sense explanation of India’s mishandling of the situation.  Assuming that Justin Trudeau was placating his Sikh constituency and assuming that his popularity rating was plummeting, is it not all the more important then for the Indian intelligence agencies to alert themselves against any misstep of theirs that might embarrass New Delhi? I am consciously not mentioning the South Block here where the country’s external affairs ministry is housed. 

Of late, foreign policy loaded statements or actions emanate routinely from the offices of the Union home minister Amit Shah and the National Security Adviser Ajit K. Doval thereby systematically marginalising the assigned role of the Minister of External Affairs, S. Jaishankar. It seems his only job now is firefighting. The case of Bangladesh provides the most recent example. If one single person has to be identified who is solely responsible for vitiating the Bangladeshi popular mind against India, it is Amit Shah. His election rallies, whether in Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand, Rajasthan, or northern India at large, irreparably damaged India-Bangladesh relations.

Without claiming knowledge as to what has really happened in the Nijjar case let us go, step by step, to build our speculation logically.

Speculation 1

The Indian Mission in Ottawa knew that India’s RAW had not killed Nijjar. If so, the Indian authorities should have immediately gotten in touch with their Canadian counterparts to exchange necessary notes for even without soiling their hands their mission had been accomplished, which was akin to both eating and having the cake at the same time. Building trust with the host country should be the first task of any foreign mission.

Speculation 2

The Indian intelligence agencies did engineer the killing of Nijjar. But the Indian mission in Canada was not allowed to know about it.  In case of many high level (mis)deeds of the state, local functionaries are kept in the dark. It may puncture the ego of foreign-service professionals, but it does happen sometimes. When Henry Kissinger was making his historic trip to China in 1972 from Pakistan, even the US ambassador to Pakistan was kept in the dark, while the Pakistani top brass of the Yahya government knew about every detail.  The US ambassador was misled to believe that Kissinger was resting in Quetta after a stomach upset which he had contracted during his just concluded visit to India.

Speculation 3

The Indian intelligence agencies had engineered the killing of Nijjar and the Indian mission was kept in the loop. If so, the Indian high commission would naturally be called upon to answer questions raised by the Canadian government and the press. Just throwing the ball back to the Canadians authorities is neither diplomacy nor politics. It is even worse to return the ball from the Indian soil after getting expelled by the Canadian government (discussed below). Bad diplomacy does not get compensated by ‘good politics’ played from the home turf. 

Also read: ‘More Expulsions Likely, Diplomatic Disaster’: What the Canadian Media Says About Nijjar Row

Let me conclude by making a few remarks. 

One, international relations literature seldom talks about racialism but it is writ large to any discerning student of global history. One must not forget that all the members of the Five Eyes grouping are essentially Anglo Saxons who trust each other more than other ethnics. Everything in history cannot be documented but there is something which is also recognised as ‘sense of history’. This can explain why these countries are on Canada’s side.

Two, Sikhs have an important social and political presence in Canada and it is foolhardy to think that all Sikhs are Khalistanis. If Canada is accused of being blind to the potential threat they pose to India’s territorial integrity, then the Indian state too should be mindful of the nonsense that is doled out at every drop of the hat to call Sikhs Khalistanis. During the farmers’ movement, it virtually became a pastime for several BJP leaders to brand Punjab farmers ‘Khalistanis.’

Three, Indian foreign service personnel are expected to be more professional. Sanjay Kumar Verma, the expelled Indian envoy to Canada, should have avoided expressing his hostility towards Prime Minister Trudeau so candidly. No one knows whether Trudeau will come back to power after the October 2025 election but a diplomat’s job is to keep all options open. In an interview to the Indian Express (October 21, 2024) Verma said: “Khalistani extremists are being encouraged all the time. This is my allegation. I am not giving any evidence of that (emphasis added).” So Trudeau, initially not giving any evidence while speculating upon the plausible complicity of Indian agents in the murder of Nijjar, should not be criticised either.

Four, if Trudeau is accused of playing to his Sikh gallery he is authorised to play to his native gallery. But our prime minister Narendra Modi has corrupted the model of political noninterference by playing even to the galleries located in foreign nations. His clarion call ‘abki baar Trump sarkar (this time it’s Trump’s rule)’ is still fresh in our memories. Only four years ago, hand-in-hand with the Republican candidate Donald Trump, he unabashedly canvassed for NRI (and largely Gujarati) votes for Trump, whom he called his “friend.”

Last, but not the least, let us Indians reconcile ourselves to the hard reality that Indians are yearning to go to Canada, or to even settle there, and not the other way round, our tall claim of having become the world’s fourth-largest economy notwithstanding. And that makes all the difference. It is well known that Canada remains one of the popular dunki routes for sneaking into the United States illegally.

Partha S. Ghosh is Senior Fellow, Institute of Social Sciences.

Cloud Over Extradition as Delhi Police Says It Arrested RAW Official Soon After US Called Him Co-Conspirator in Pannun Case

The filing of this Delhi Police case implies that any US request for Vikash Yadav to be handed over to face trial in New York would likely be put on hold pending the final outcome of this case, including disposal of all appeals – a process which could take years.

New Delhi: Vikash Yadav, the former government official named by the US Department of Justice as the mastermind behind the plot to kill pro-Khalistan activist Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, was arrested by Delhi Police within three weeks of being alluded to in the first US indictment in November 2023, the Delhi police is quoted by Indian Express as claiming.

Yadav was arrested on attempt to murder and extortion charges, spent four months in Tihar jail and was released on bail in April 2024, the newspaper has reported.

While the November 29, 2023 indictment had not named Yadav – referring to him instead as ‘CC1’ – the second and superseding indictment released on October 17, 2024, revealed his identity as a officer who was employed by the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) of the Cabinet Secretariat at the time. The Ministry of External affairs has claimed that Yadav, who was seconded to RAW from the Contral Reserve Police Force, is “no longer” a government official though no date has been provided in the public domain for when he resigned or was terminated.

Yadav, charged by the US with murder-for-hire, conspiracy to commit murder-for-hire, and money laundering is wanted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

FBI poster for Vikash Yadav

On December 18, 2023, the Delhi Police Special Cell arrested Yadav after an FIR was filed against him by a Rohini resident, accusing him of extortion and kidnapping and linking him to gangster Lawrence Bishnoi, the Indian Express report notes.

The filing of this Delhi Police case implies that any US extradition request for Vikash Yadav would likely be put on hold pending the final outcome of this case, including disposal of all appeals – a process which could take years.

The complaint by the Rohini resident alleges that Yadav ran an IT company and had told the Rohini resident that he was “some kind of undercover agent” executing a sensitive operation for a Central agency. The complainant alleges that Yadav forcibly took him to a flat, where one of his accomplices injured him and forced him to give him his gold chain, some rings and cash from a cafe he ran. The complainant also said that he was warned of dire consequences if he divulged this information.

In the second Department of Justice indictment, there are allegations that Yadav made references to a “boss” during his conversations with Indian businessman Nikhil Gupta, who is in US custody.

While the Delhi Police complaint against Yadav alleges connections between him and gangster Lawrence Bishnoi, the Canadian national police has accused the Indian government of outsourcing the targeting of Sikhs in Canada to the Lawrence Bishnoi gang. Bishnoi is currently being held in jail in Gujarat but is reportedly running his operations from there. The US indictment, too, has allegation of Yadav and Gupta conversing on the killing of Khalistan activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar in Canada.

A Washington Post report has it that Canadian officials have told the Indian government that “conversations and texts among Indian diplomats” who were ordered out of Canada on October 14, “include references” to Union home minister Amit Shah and a senior official in the Research and Analysis Wing in India “who have authorised… intelligence-gathering missions and attacks on Sikh separatists,” in Canada.

The Delhi Police is under the direct control of Shah.

Lawyers familiar with the functioning of the criminal law enforcement system in India have expressed scepticism about the case on which Yadav has been arrested.