HomeWorldKhalistani extremist Inderjeet Gosal held in Canada: How the high-profile arrest reflects a hard reset in ties with India

Khalistani extremist Inderjeet Gosal held in Canada: How the high-profile arrest reflects a hard reset in ties with India

Indian security officials have interpreted the Gosal arrest as a significant acknowledgement of New Delhi’s long-standing allegations that separatist elements abroad are engaged in organised militancy.

September 22, 2025 / 14:55 IST
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In what officials describe as the “first visible outcome” of a hard reset in India–Canada security cooperation, Canadian authorities have arrested Inderjeet Singh Gosal, a key Khalistan Referendum coordinator and close associate of Gurpatwant Singh Pannun. Gosal was detained on multiple firearms-related charges in Ottawa, an action widely viewed as a sharp departure from Canada’s earlier permissive stance towards separatist groups operating under the cover of free speech.

CNN-News18 quotes intelligence sources familiar with the matter, according to whom, the arrest follows sustained diplomatic and intelligence pressure from New Delhi, spearheaded by National Security Adviser (NSA) Ajit Doval. Indian agencies had supplied Ottawa with detailed dossiers, including financial trail intelligence and evidence linking Gosal directly to Pannun. These inputs, sources said, proved decisive in pushing Canadian authorities to clamp down on extremist sleeper cells that had long exploited the country’s lenient environment.

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“This is confirmation that Khalistani networks in Canada remain active extensions of banned outfits. The fact that Ottawa has now moved on actionable intelligence provided by India shows a clear policy recalibration,” sources told CNN-News18.

Indian security officials have interpreted the Gosal arrest as a significant acknowledgement of New Delhi’s long-standing allegations that separatist elements abroad are engaged in organised militancy. By detaining an individual with operational proximity to Pannun, who has already been designated a terrorist by India, Canadian authorities have reinforced India’s charge that extremist networks are not merely advocacy groups but pose a tangible security threat.