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Ex-Canadian Minister Slams Kahlistanis, Calls for Reset in India-Canada Ties After Modi G7 Visit
Ex-Canadian Minister Slams Kahlistanis, Calls for Reset in India-Canada Ties After Modi G7 Visit

Time of India

time3 days ago

  • Politics
  • Time of India

Ex-Canadian Minister Slams Kahlistanis, Calls for Reset in India-Canada Ties After Modi G7 Visit

Former Canadian Health Minister Ujjal Dosanjh breaks his silence on the state of India-Canada relations. In a hard-hitting interview following PM Modi's G7 visit to Canada, Dosanjh calls out Khalistani extremism, slams Canada's political leniency, and highlights the need for urgent reset in diplomacy. He revisits the Air India bombing, exposes Pakistan's ISI links, and urges PM Carney to build constructive engagement with India — the world's 4th largest economy. Dosanjh also condemns attacks on journalists and calls for zero tolerance against radical threats to democracy. Can Canada afford to ignore India's rise? Is the G7 summit the turning point? Watch now for insights from one of Canada's most outspoken political voices.#india #canada #ujjaldosanjh #modi #g7summit #khalistan #airindiabombing #carney #diplomacy #extremism #pakistan #isi #freedomofspeech #canadianpolitics #indocanada #toi #toibharat #bharat #breakingnews #indianews Read More

FIRST READING: Immigrants denied Carney his majority
FIRST READING: Immigrants denied Carney his majority

National Post

time05-05-2025

  • Politics
  • National Post

FIRST READING: Immigrants denied Carney his majority

Article content Article content Article content Ujjal Dosanjh is one of the only Canadians who might be able to empathize with what just happened to NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh. In 2000, Dosanjh was leader of the B.C. NDP when it suffered one of the most lopsided defeats in Canadian history, going from a majority government to just two seats. But Dosanjh, who also served as minister of health under then prime minister Paul Martin, didn't mention any of that in a recent blog post. Instead, he welcomed the new government of Mark Carney, said he trusted him on fiscal issues, but warned the Liberals to be more diligent about requiring new immigrants to assimilate. 'We need immigrants but not the kind that tell us to bend to their whims, religious or otherwise,' he wrote. 'I hope Mr. Carney doesn't believe one can come to Canada and not change even a bit and be in Canada 'who you were where ever you were.'' Article content Article content Article content

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