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The genesis of Canada’s troubled relations with India

Until it introduced a merit-based Comprehensive Ranking System in 2015 for screening potential immigrants, anyone who had a sob story to tell at a border post that they were being tortured by the state or by armed militias could get asylum in Canada. Scrutiny was poor and political interference by lobbies to let in relatives of relatives was high

September 22, 2023 / 12:31 IST
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Tensions which have now marred relations between New Delhi and Ottawa were waiting to happen.

The following episode offers a vital clue to how India got to the present state of affairs in its relationship with Canada.

In the 2004 Canadian federal election, when incumbent prime minister Justin Trudeau’s last Liberal Party predecessor Paul Martin retained office, I was witness to a bizarre campaign event in the Greater Toronto area. Martin did not have time to go to every riding (constituency) in the second largest country on earth in area and drum up support for his Liberal Party candidates. So, he assembled half a dozen of them at a single campaign event in Mississauga, which looks like a town in Punjab. Sikhs are everywhere and all things in Mississauga are Punjabi. Only one of those six Liberals, whom the prime minister was stumping for, was white. Everyone else was of Punjabi origin — either Hindu or Sikh.

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The sole white Liberal candidate, a woman who stood out in a sea of South Asian faces in the audience, was ill at ease although Carolyn Bennett was a minister in Martin’s cabinet. She is still immensely popular in her mid-town Toronto riding of St Paul’s. Bennett has consistently won the seat since 1997 and was a minister in Trudeau’s cabinet until July this year. When her turn came to speak at the campaign meeting 19 years ago, Bennett told the audience that she must have been Indian in her previous birth. That was her way of integrating into the many mini-Indias that dot Canada’s more populous provinces, Ontario and British Columbia.

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