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Rising Bharat Summit 2025: Jaishankar said: “I would encourage both India and Canada to work to improve the relationship with each other.”

S JAISHANKAR at the Bharat Rising Bharat summit of News18.
Bharat Rising 2025 Summit: The Minister of External Affairs, S Jaishankar, said he would encourage India and Canada to have a better relationship, since he urged both countries to work in it. Hey said: “I would encourage both India and Canada to work to improve the relationship between them.”
What Jaishankar said in the ties of Canada de la India
In Rising Bharat Summit 2025, Jaishankar said: “I will be very careful to comment on Canada, since I don’t want to use political campaigns in the country.”
He added: “For us, the direction in which the ties have been gone has not served the interests of Canada. I would like both parties to repair the relationship.”
Read more: ‘We see an opportunity in the current situation.’
The general electoral campaign of Canada is underway in the middle of a commercial war with the United States, while the president of the United States, Donald Trump, comments on making State 51 of the US country. The Canadians will go to the polls on April 28 after Justin Trudeau resigned earlier this year. After this, Mark Carny taught as prime minister.
Jaishankar about Canada’s position on secessants
S Jaishankar also said that Canada must recognize the problem of secessionism and not the platform such forces. He said: “If he encourages, he imports secessisism, there are consequences for his own. We see them collect the problem, not on the platform of such forces.”
India has maintained that the main problem between the two countries is that of Canada that gives space to the pro-halisal elements that operate from the Canadian soil.
Catch all Rising Bharat Summit 2025 updates Gentleman
Tense corros of India-Canada
The relations between the two countries became a severe tension after the accusations of Justin Trudeau in September last year of a “potential” participation of the Indian agents in the death or the extremist of Khalalistan Hardep Singh Nijjar. These statements were rejected by New Delhi as “absurd.”
After this, India expelled six Canadian diplomats and withdrew its high commissioner Sanjay Verma and other “directed” officials in Canada.
- Location:
Delhi, India, India