Ties between Canada and India are at their lowest point in decades after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau accused the Indian government of orchestrating the assassination of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a Canadian activist who was pushing for an independent Sikh homeland in the Punjab region.
India has denied the allegation, calling it “absurd” and hitting back with measures aimed at curbing travel between two nations.
Montreal-based engineering firm SNC-Lavalin Group Inc., which now operates under the brand name of AtkinsRealis, has limited travel to India for Canadian employees to “essential reasons only” until further notice, the firm’s spokesperson, Laurence Myre Leroux, said in an email. There hasn’t been any impact on operations so far, she added, but the situation is being monitored “closely.”
India’s move means most Canadians won’t be able to travel there if they don’t already have a visa. Travel agents said e-visa applications online were also not being processed for Canadians. And while Canadians who previously held Indian passports are eligible for Overseas Citizen of India cards – which allow visa-free entry – many do not hold them.
It’s not just business travel. The visa suspension is also hitting leisure travellers: Canadians made 280,000 tourist arrivals in India last year, according to Indian government data, making it the No. 5 source of such visitors.
“I already have four or five people calling me this morning. They’re due to go in October and November for eight to 10 days of sightseeing. Now, they’re worried because the tours are non-refundable,” said Ottawa-based travel agent Lalit Sharma, who specializes in India. “If they don’t have the visas, they can’t go.”
At the BLS office in Toronto, a sign told visitors that visa services were suspended for “operational reasons.” Most of the people in line on Thursday morning were there to renew their Indian passports, but others were trying to get advice on the visa suspension.
Note : We do not claim ownership or copyright for all the information, content, or materials presented on this blog. These materials may include, but are not limited to, text, images, videos, graphics, and other media. Unless explicitly stated otherwise, such content is used for informational or educational purposes and may be sourced from various publicly available and authorized sources.