Thursday, December 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

PM's adviser says India committed to co-operating with police investigations

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Sep, 2025 11:17 AM
  • PM's adviser says India committed to co-operating with police investigations

Prime Minister Mark Carney's national security adviser says India has "absolutely" committed to co-operating and sharing information with Canadian police for ongoing investigations.

"They realize that — and the same thing on our side — by sharing information we will have safer streets in Canada," Drouin told reporters Thursday outside the cabinet room on Parliament Hill.

She described the meeting as "very productive," where both sides "re-established a channel of communication to talk about respective concerns."

Her comments largely echo a statement she put out last Friday.

Drouin also said there are plans for Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand to visit India.

Drouin travelled to India last week and met on Sept. 18 with Ajit Doval, New Delhi's national security adviser, to talk about mutual security issues and transnational repression.

In her written statement issued last Friday, Drouin said she and Doval "committed to non-interference, including refraining from transnational repression."

India's new high commissioner to Canada officially started his new job in Ottawa on Wednesday.

Relations between Canada and India have been strained since then-prime minister Justin Trudeau told the House of Commons that Canada had "credible" evidence indicating New Delhi played a role in the June 2023 assassination of a Sikh activist near Vancouver.

In October 2024, the relationship fractured further when the RCMP said it had strong evidence linking a campaign of violence and intimidation targeting Canadians to the "highest levels" of the Indian government.

Canada subsequently expelled six Indian diplomats, including the high commissioner, and India responded by expelling the same number of Canadians.

India has claimed that Canada is allowing Sikh extremists to issue threats and commit acts of violence in both countries and accuses Ottawa of not doing enough to stop a repeat of the 1984 Air India bombing.

The chill began to lift slightly in June when Prime Minister Mark Carney invited Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to the G7 summit in Alberta and both countries agreed to restore their top diplomats.

Sikh diaspora groups have called for caution in Canada's approach to India, with some expressing alarm at the prospect of Ottawa sharing law-enforcement information with New Delhi.

Asked to respond to those concerns Thursday, Drouin said both countries are on the same page.

"We have a common understanding and a common goal here. They want us to be very clear in terms of the One India, and the respect of the integrity of their territory, and what we want are safer streets in Canada," she said.

"We have found a way, as I said, to address mutual concerns, and for leaders to be able to talk about (the) trade relationship."

Global Affairs Canada deputy minister David Morrison, the top bureaucrat in the foreign service, was also in New Delhi earlier this month for meetings with senior officials.

In a statement last Friday, India's foreign ministry said both countries have "decided to constructively address capacity-related issues at their respective missions and consulates."

It said Carney and Modi are committed to restoring "stability in the relationship" and pursuing "a constructive and balanced partnership."

To that end, it said, both countries will "reactivate" discussions on "trade, defence, energy, civil nuclear, security and law enforcement, critical minerals, space, science and technology, and agriculture."

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Spencer Colby

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Conservatives accuse Eby of spending on comedian speech writer as deficit grows

B.C. Conservatives accuse Eby of spending on comedian speech writer as deficit grows
Demers is one of five speech writers "necessary" for his job, Eby told an unrelated news conference on Tuesday. The value of Demers' contract so far has been $14,000, not "quite as sensational" as the Conservatives are claiming, he said.

B.C. Conservatives accuse Eby of spending on comedian speech writer as deficit grows

Social media has U.S. in its grip and won't let go. The Charlie Kirk killing is a case study

Social media has U.S. in its grip and won't let go. The Charlie Kirk killing is a case study
In a microcosm of life today, social media is where Americans have gone to process last week's killing in Utah and is the chief tool his supporters are using to police those they feel aren't offering proper respect. Investigators are probing the time the man accused of killing Kirk, Tyler Robinson, spent in the “dark corners of the internet” — anti-social media, if you will — leading up to when he allegedly pulled the trigger.

Social media has U.S. in its grip and won't let go. The Charlie Kirk killing is a case study

Ione Christensen, famed for Yukon politics, century-old sourdough starter, dies at 91

Ione Christensen, famed for Yukon politics, century-old sourdough starter, dies at 91
A former senator and the first woman to be mayor of Whitehorse, Christensen died Monday at the age of 91.

Ione Christensen, famed for Yukon politics, century-old sourdough starter, dies at 91

B.C. government workers step up job action by targeting mining sector

B.C. government workers step up job action by targeting mining sector
The BC General Employees' Union and Professionals Employees Association say staff in mineral and mines offices in Vancouver and Cranbrook will join picket lines.

B.C. government workers step up job action by targeting mining sector

Federal union expands campaign denouncing cuts at Canada Revenue Agency

Federal union expands campaign denouncing cuts at Canada Revenue Agency
The "Canada on Hold" campaign was launched last month with a focus on CRA call centres but has now been expanded to draw attention to staffing cuts across the agency.

Federal union expands campaign denouncing cuts at Canada Revenue Agency

Bank of Canada cuts key interest rate to 2.5% as U.S. tariff risks shift

Bank of Canada cuts key interest rate to 2.5% as U.S. tariff risks shift
The Bank of Canada’s policy rate now stands at 2.5 per cent, breaking a streak of three consecutive holds since March.

Bank of Canada cuts key interest rate to 2.5% as U.S. tariff risks shift