The Indian government on Thursday lambasted Canada’s decision to allow a referendum for a separate Sikh homeland in the western Indian state of Punjab. The foreign ministry has termed the Khalistan Referendum a “farcical exercise” carried out by Sikh "extremists."
“We find it deeply objectionable that politically motivated exercises by extremist elements are allowed to take place in a friendly country,” Arindam Bagchi, spokesperson for India’s Ministry of External Affairs, said.
The spokesperson said that the world is aware of the “history of violence” in this regard, referring to a Sikh secessionist insurgency in India in the 1990s that resulted in hundreds of deaths, including the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi.
New Delhi’s response came after several diplomatic messages saw little action by Ontario, where the vote was held, to stop the so-called “referendum” in Brampton on September 19. The vote was organized by a pro-Khalistani group, Sikhs for Justice, which has been banned in India since 2019 as an unlawful association.
The Canadian government has reiterated that it respects India's "sovereignty and territorial integrity." However, it conveyed to New Delhi that it would protect its citizens' right to assemble and to express their views peacefully and lawfully.
New Delhi seems unsatisfied with the response, saying the Indian government will "continue to press the Government of Canada for action in this matter."
Sikh For Justice actively campaigns for Punjab's independence referendum in the US, and the UK, hoping to establish a separate Khalistan.