Indian Visas For Canadians Suspended Amid Row: "Operational Reasons"
This comes as India and Canada are locked in a row over Ottawa's claim it has "credible allegations" linking agents of New Delhi to the murder of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a pro-Khalistan Sikh terrorist.
India-Canada ties were already tense after Prime Minister Narendra Modi's conversation with Canada's Justin Trudeau at the G20 Summit in Delhi this month. The PM expressed India's "strong concerns about continuing anti-India activities" in that country.
On Monday, months after Nijjar was killed, Mr Trudeau said his country's security agencies had information indicating "agents of the Indian government" had assassinated the Canadian citizen.
India "completely rejected" the allegations regarding its involvement in Nijjar's death and underlined its concerns over their (Canada's) political figures openly expressing sympathy for "such elements".
"Such unsubstantiated allegations seek to shift focus from Khalistani terrorists and extremists, who have been provided shelter in Canada and continue to threaten India's sovereignty and territorial integrity. The Canadian government's inaction has been a long-standing and continuing concern."
As the row escalated, the two countries each expelled a senior official.
Ottawa ordered a senior official of the Research and Analysis Wing to leave the country and India ejected a diplomat for "interference... in internal matters and involvement in anti-India activities".
The two nations also exchanged travel advisories.
Canada updated its India advisory this week to mirror that of the United States and it explicitly mentions Jammu and Kashmir and the northeast, warning of "violent clashes between militants and security forces in the former" and "ethnic tensions" leading to "conflict and civil unrest"in the latter.
On Wednesday, shortly after External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar met PM Modi in the new Parliament building, India advised its citizens in Canada, and those contemplating travelling, to exercise "utmost caution" in view of anti-India activities and "politically-condoned" hate crimes.
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