Sunday, December 14, 2025
ADVT 
National

India has agreed to restore full cohort of Canadian diplomats, Anand says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Oct, 2025 09:01 AM
  • India has agreed to restore full cohort of Canadian diplomats, Anand says

India has agreed to readmit a full cohort of Canadian diplomats, two years after New Delhi forced Ottawa to send most of its envoys home, Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand said on Tuesday.

Anand is in India where she met Monday with Prime Minister Narendra Modi and senior government officials. She was invited to be the first cabinet minister to visit the country, following two years of strained diplomatic relations.

She said the speed at which the Canadian mission in India returns to full strength could help determine whether the two countries relaunch trade negotiations.

"The approach that we are following is a step-by-step approach, to be prudent along the way," Anand told reporters in a video conference from Mumbai.

During her visit, the two countries signed a statement outlining areas where they want to co-operate, including trade and artificial intelligence.

Canada and India expelled each other's senior diplomats last fall after the RCMP accused New Delhi of playing a role in a network of violence in Canada linked to homicides and acts of extortion.

In September 2023, the federal government accused New Delhi of playing a role in the assassination of a Sikh activist near Vancouver earlier that year.

Anand said the reset of diplomatic relations with India will happen only gradually, starting with the re-establishment of Canada's full cohort of diplomats.

Canada removed most of its diplomatic presence from India in October 2023 after New Delhi threatened to strip diplomatic immunity from 41 diplomats and their 42 dependants.

Its diplomatic cohort in India has been gradually restored since then, and both countries named new high commissioners in August. Global Affairs Canada did not immediately respond when asked how many Canadian diplomats are now accredited to India.

Anand said she raised the matter of restoring Canadas diplomatic cohort with her Indian counterpart, Subrahmanyam Jaishankar.

"We both agreed that we would staff up as we had been before, in order to service our respective populations," she said.

"We want to make sure that they have the resources to service the population wanting to obtain visas, and wanting to travel between the two countries."

Anand said Ottawa needs to see its diplomatic presence restored before it considers a trade mission or revives talks on a possible trade deal, which have ebbed and flowed since 2010.

Anand said Canada will at all times defend the security of Canadians. Both countries have agreed to closed-doors talks on security.

Canadian officials have said those talks are helping address concerns about transnational repression without allowing those issues to dominate the relationship.

The World Sikh Organization of Canada said Monday it is "deeply concerned" by the fact the joint statement from offered "no assurances about stopping foreign interference or transnational repression."

Anand also met with Indian Trade Minister Piyush Goyal, who said he had a "productive discussion" last Saturday with Canada's Trade Minister Maninder Sidhu.

Sidhu said the two countries can collaborate on clean technology, agriculture and critical minerals, while Goyal said trade and investment "should be grounded in the principles of mutual respect, trust and balance."

Sidhu's briefing binder, prepared by Global Affairs Canada in May, says India has contributed to problems in the global trading order on which Canada relies, particularly the rules outlined by the World Trade Organization.

"Negotiations of major interest such as agriculture have long been stalemated. A handful of obstructive members, led by India, routinely block outcomes negotiated and desired by most members," the binder reads.

Picture Courtesy: Leon Neal/Pool Photo via AP

MORE National ARTICLES

Major projects to be announced

Major projects to be announced
Bill C-5, which moved through Parliament at lightning speed in the spring, is meant to streamline and speed up approvals for large infrastructure projects the prime minister and his cabinet decide are in the national interest.

Major projects to be announced

Extreme weather, U.S. funding cuts add pressure for Canada's weather service: report

Extreme weather, U.S. funding cuts add pressure for Canada's weather service: report
The independent assessment prepared for Environment and Climate Change Canada says significant cuts to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration threaten a wide range of weather and water monitoring in Canada, from the Arctic to the Great Lakes. 

Extreme weather, U.S. funding cuts add pressure for Canada's weather service: report

Driver facing charges in daycare crash that killed toddler, injured six other kids

Driver facing charges in daycare crash that killed toddler, injured six other kids
The man, who was arrested at the scene in Richmond Hill, Ont., is facing one count of dangerous driving causing death and one count of dangerous driving causing bodily harm, said York Regional Police.

Driver facing charges in daycare crash that killed toddler, injured six other kids

Canada Looks East: Trump’s Tariff Tantrums Trigger Canada’s Pivot to Europe

Canada Looks East: Trump’s Tariff Tantrums Trigger Canada’s Pivot to Europe
Even as Canada and the U.S. are still engaged in trade talks, which can lead to a deal that might reduce tariffs, Prime Minister Mark Carney’s recent war of words with Trump has indicated that things will not remain the same between the two neighbors.  

Canada Looks East: Trump’s Tariff Tantrums Trigger Canada’s Pivot to Europe

Vancouver festival attack suspect faces 31 more charges as he is ruled fit for trial

Vancouver festival attack suspect faces 31 more charges as he is ruled fit for trial
The attempted murder charges were described at a provincial court hearing where a judge ruled that Adam Kai-Ji Lo is mentally fit to stand trial over the April 26 attack in which an SUV plowed through a crowded street.

Vancouver festival attack suspect faces 31 more charges as he is ruled fit for trial

Alberta woman pleads guilty to manslaughter with Crown, police at odds

Alberta woman pleads guilty to manslaughter with Crown, police at odds
Edmonton's interim police chief earlier made public a letter from his force to Alberta's justice ministry saying it was aware of the plea deal and urged the Crown to call it off.

Alberta woman pleads guilty to manslaughter with Crown, police at odds