On Tuesday, the Canadian government updated its travel advisory, asking its citizens to avoid all travel to India’s Jammu and Kashmir Region “due to the unpredictable security situation.”
He participated in the attack on Khalistan in June—the actions of Lebanese extremist Hardeep Singh Nijjar.
In a statement, Canada said: “Due to the unsafe situation, please avoid all travel to the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir.
There are threats of terrorism, armed forces, conflict, and kidnapping in the Ladakh region or the Union Territory.
Ladakh latest The development came as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau asked India on Tuesday to take Canadian allegations against New Delhi “very seriously”. At the same time, Washington expressed similar concerns over its role in the Nijar attack.
Canada’s allegations led to the suspension of an Indian officer in Canada and the expulsion of a senior Canadian diplomat from New Delhi.
“India needs to take this matter with the utmost seriousness. We are doing that; we are not looking to provoke or escalate,” Trudeau told reporters.
Canada said on Monday that “there are credible allegations” that agents affiliated with New Delhi He was responsible for the June 18 killing of Canadian citizen Nijjar in front of Sikh cultural arrangements in Vancouver.
Narendra Modi Government said Canada was to blame. “Unbelievable.” Trudeau said on Tuesday that his comments said he did not intend to “create tension” with Delhi.
“We have no intention of escalating the situation,” he said in Ottawa on Tuesday morning, according to CBC broadcast. “We only tell the truth as we understand them,” he said.