In the News
APF Canada's media responses to the latest issues and events in Asia
US, UK Push Ahead With Modi Despite Bombshell Trudeau Claims
Bloomberg, October 15, 2024
Featuring: Vina Nadjibulla, Vice-President Research & Strategy, APF Canada
Excerpt: "This issue is not unique to Canada, although the diplomatic fallout and the way all of this has unfolded publicly is unique to Canada,"
Le Canada fait la une des médias en Inde après l'expulsion de six diplomates
Néo média, 15 octobre 2024
Avec : Vina Nadjibulla, vice-présidente, Recherche et stratégie, FAP Canada
Extrait : «La réaction des États-Unis sera celle à laquelle tout le monde prêtera attention.
«Pour que le Canada, à ce stade, obtienne une forme quelconque de coopération de la part de l'Inde et obtienne des comptes pour ce qui s'est passé, il faudrait que l'Inde ressente une certaine pression. Il faudrait que l'Inde ait une raison de coopérer.»
Canada spat leads India newspapers, as analysts await reactions from peer countries
CP24, October 15, 2024
Featuring: Vina Nadjibulla, Vice-President Research & Strategy, APF Canada
Excerpt: "We are in uncharted territory, with implications for the diplomatic relationship as well as for Canada's public safety and national security.
...Canada did what it thought was necessary"
Canada spat leads India newspapers as trade minister works to reassure business
CBC News, October 15, 2024
Featuring: Vina Nadjibulla, Vice-President Research & Strategy, APF Canada
Excerpt: "The reaction from the U.S. is going to be the one that everybody will be paying attention to.
"...In order for Canada, at this stage, to have any kind of co-operation from India and seek accountability for what has happened, we would need India to feel some pressure, we would need India to feel some reason to co-operate.
"...We're not dealing here with a rogue state. We're dealing here with a very important international player."
India withdraws Canada envoy named in murder probe
TRT World Now (Turkey), October 15, 2024
Featuring: Vina Nadjibulla, Vice-President Research & Strategy, APF Canada
Excerpt: "The relations between Canada and India are now at an extremely low point . . . today's developments and the information that has now become available both through the press briefing by our prime minister as well as our law enforcement agencies it's just a new level of escalation and it's the kind of disruption to the relationship that won't be healed anytime soon.
"We're seeing India fully refusing all the allegations, essentially refusing to co-operate. Canada continues to call on India to engage diplomatically, to engage with our law enforcement to get to the bottom of this assassination, essentially, and other violent crimes that now the Canadian government is saying India has been involved in.
"As our prime minister said, there was no desire on the part of Canada to find itself in this huge diplomatic crisis with India, but given the seriousness of the allegations, given the fact Canada now says India was involved in a whole wide campaign of criminal activities, not just one assassination, this step had to be taken. Of course now we are in uncharted diplomatic waters."
Canada spat leads India newspapers, as analysts await reactions from peer countries
The Canadian Press, October 15, 2024
Featuring: APF Canada Vice-President Research & Strategy Vina Nadjibulla
Excerpt: "Vina Nadjibulla, research vice-president for the Asia Pacific Foundation, says she’s watching to see how Canada’s peers respond to the “unprecedented, extraordinary” news.
That could mean diplomatic moves behind the scenes, and possibly public statements of support for Canada.
“The reaction from the U.S. is going to be the one that everybody will be paying attention to,” she said.
“In order for Canada, at this stage, to have any kind of co-operation from India and seek accountability for what has happened, we would need India to feel some pressure; we would need India to feel some reason to co-operate.”
Nadjibulla said it was notable that Joly accused active diplomats of involvement in criminality, and that she said violence linked to the Indian government had only increased since Canada made its concerns public last year.
Diplomatic consequences of eroding relationship between Canada and India
The Vassy Kapelos Show, October 15, 2024
Featuring: Vina Nadjibulla, Vice-President Research & Strategy, APF Canada
Topic: Vina Nadjibulla joins Vassy to discuss the political impact on the relationship between Canada and India following both countries expelling diplomats over murder accusations.
Canada, India expel diplomats as police uncover ‘campaign of violence’
Aljazeera, October 14, 2024
Featuring: Vina Nadjibulla, Vice-President Research & Strategy, APF Canada
Excerpt: the expulsions marked “a serious escalation in the diplomatic tensions that have been going on for over a year now between Canada and India.
“We’re seeing a diplomatic rupture,” said Nadjibulla, adding that the response of other countries, including the United States and other members of the Group of 7 bloc of nations, will likely play an important role.
“Canada is continuing to call on India to cooperate with the investigation, but India has refused to do that... What will be decisive in this is the views of our key allies and partners.”
Canada has expelled six Indian diplomats
On the Coast with Gloria Macarenko (CBC), October 14, 2024
Featuring: Vina Nadjibulla, Vice-President Research & Strategy APF Canada
Excerpt: "I have to stress, and I know we often say something is unprecedented, but in many years working in diplomacy and international relations, I haven't seen something evolve in this way, in this public way, a dispute with a partner.
"India is not China, is not Russia, is not North Korea, we have relations, diplomatic as well as people-to-people as well as business ties with India, a huge Indo-Canadian community. India is seen as a strategic partner when it comes to our Indo-Pacific strategy, that's how our allies view India as well.
"So this is an incredible development and we are now at a diplomatic low in the relationship that would have been hard to imagine just a couple of days ago."
'It's very serious': APFC CEO on India allegations
CTV News, October 14, 2024
Featuring: Jeff Nankivell, President & CEO, APF Canada
Excerpt: "This a very significant development and certainly it's been received very poorly in India and the Indian media is aflame with coverage of this. And, in fact, the India government got out ahead of the story a few hours before it was revealed to Canadian media that the six Indian diplomats, including the high commissioner, had been expelled, effectively. The Indian ministry of external affairs put out its version of the story which was that the diplomats were being withdrawn for their own safety.
"It's very serious and for the RCMP to come out in the way that they did, one assumes, its an indication that they believe they have the evidence. They talked about having made arrests and laid charges against 30 or more individuals with charges related to homicide, extortion, coercion, and intimidation. We will have to see in the days and weeks ahead the details of the individual cases but it's worth noting that this is something now that is in the realm of the justice system and is likely to go on and on regardless of what happens diplomatically between the two national governments."
How significant is the breakdown in India-Canada relations?
ABC News (Australia), October 14, 2024
Featuring: Vina Nadjibulla, Vice-President Research & Strategy, APF Canada
Excerpt: "Today's events are just unprecedented. This is really an astonishing set of activities that have happened throughout the day. We've seen the expulsion of diplomats but we've also heard the RCMP, as well as prime minister of Canada, note in no uncertain terms that Canada believes Indian diplomats have been engaged in criminal activities [and] acts of violence here on Canadian soil [and] that because of...public safety issues they had to come out and make publicly these statement that have led to this enormous disruption in the bilateral relationship.
Canada expels Indian diplomats as RCMP links Indian agents to violent activity
CBC News, October 14, 2024
Featuring: Vina Nadjibulla, Vice-President Research & Strategy, APF Canada
Excerpt: "...What we are seeing is utterly unprecedented. This is a diplomatic disruption on a scale we have not seen before and it is all unfolding in public and there are developments every hour. There will be repercussions, both obviously for our bilateral relationship with India...but also for [Canada's] engagement in the region.
...India is a rising power in Asia and globally...[and] we will continue to feel these repercussions for days to come.
...For Canada, it's not just about our bilateral relationship. We will need our allies, we will need our partners with us on this. The diplomatic game has really now need[ed] to be ramped up to make sure not only our allies, but key actors in the region, are with us, that they understand what's happening... for Canada we need to get ahead of this from a narrative perspective."
Canada-India relations in ‘uncharted waters’
CTV News, October 14, 2024
Featuring: Vina Nadjibulla, Vice-President Research & Strategy, APF Canada
Excerpt: "What we essentially just heard the prime minister of Canada say is that Indian and diplomatic officials here in Canada have been involved in criminal activities and violation[s] of Canadian state sovereignty... we are in uncharted waters ... for this to happen with a friendly country is unprecedented and it will have implications on every dimension of Canada's engagement with India but it will also have implications for our broader engagement with the region."
Canada expels 6 Indian diplomats, RCMP alleges 'serious criminal activity'
CBC News, October 14, 2024
Featuring: Vina Nadjibulla, Vice-President Research & Strategy, APF Canada
Excerpt: "...There is an ongoing threat to Canadians here in Canada and that's why [the RCMP] are acting [now]...There's a national security element as well where we're looking at a wide campaign that has been going on for years of transnational aggression here in Canada.
...There will be growing demand on India for accountability... This involves Canada but it also involves our diplomatic partners, notably the United States, which also have issues [with India] along those lines
... No matter what the concerns are on the part of India [regarding the Pro-Khalistan movement in Canada], transitional killings and homicides in a friendly state is absolutely unacceptable."
Philippine defence: what’s so special about the Typhon missile system?
South China Morning Post, October 11, 2024
Featuring: Vina Nadjibulla, Vice-President Research & Strategy, APF Canada
Excerpt: Vina Nadjibulla, vice-president of research and strategy at the Asia-Pacific Foundation of Canada, said the decision to keep the Typhon was likely part of a broader US strategy to enhance its presence in the Indo-Pacific amid growing tensions with China.
“It signals a strengthened US-Philippine defence relationship and could serve as a deterrent against Chinese actions in contested areas like the South China Sea and Taiwan Strait,” Nadjibulla told This Week in Asia.
A podcast discussion of the 44th and 45th ASEAN Summits
The Vassey Kapelos Show, October 10, 2024
Featuring: Vina Nadjibulla, Vice-President, Research & Strategy, APF Canada
Topic: Vina Nadjibulla, Vice-President, Research & Strategy, Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada joins Vassy to discuss the 44th and 45th ASEAN Summits.
Canada could help balance the scales with China as tensions rise in South China Sea, experts say
CBC News, October 8, 2024
Featuring: Vina Nadjibulla, Vice-President Research & Strategy, APF Canada, and Stephen Nagy, APF Canada Senior Fellow and Professor, International Christian University, Tokyo.
Excerpt (Nagy): "None of the countries in the region want to escalate the security tensions within the region, but they do want to have the capabilities to be able to deal with these challenges bilaterally with China."
"The South China Sea is really a cauldron of instability . . . What we think is this could cascade into a kinetic conflict. And what that means is a conflict between militaries within the South China Sea. "
Excerpt (Nadjibulla): Vina Nadjibulla . . . said Canada and the U.S. are among the countries that have been calling China out over its "aggressive manoeuvres" in the South China Sea.
She said those "unprofessional" tactics — widely seen as acts of intimidation and coercion — have led to "constant near-misses" between ships.
"Essentially, [the Chinese are] trying to dissuade other economies from using ... the resources available in their own economic zone," she said.
Trudeau heads to Southeast Asia as Israel-Hamas war promises to overshadow trade talks
CBC News, October 7, 2024
Featuring: Vina Nadjibulla, Vice-President Research & Strategy, APF Canada
Excerpt: "What's important is to remind everyone that we care about human rights, we care about resolving conflicts everywhere in the world, not just in certain locations, in order to be able to counter this charge of hypocrisy," Nadjibulla said.
Claims that the nations of the West — and the U.S. in particular — are taking a hypocritical approach to the Israel-Hamas war are "overblown," she said, and are being driven by Russian and Chinese disinformation campaigns.
Canada can’t afford to squander chance for rare Indo-Pacific role with AUKUS, say analysts
Hill Times, September 25, 2024
Featuring: Vina Nadjibulla, Vice-President Research & Strategy, APF Canada
Extract: “It’s good to leverage our excellence in quantum, and AI research, and cyber defence capabilities, but we also need to put new resources and invest in the necessary platforms and modernize platforms, including through NORAD, but also our engagement in the Indo-Pacific,” [Vina Nadjibulla,Vice-President Research & Strategy at the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada] said.
A year after PM Trudeau’s allegations, mistrust blights India, Canada ties
Hindustan Times, September 18, 2024
Featuring: Vina Nadjibulla, Vice President Research & Strategy, APF Canada
Extract: Things should improve, said Vina Nadjibulla, vice president, research and strategy, at the Vancouver-based Asia-Pacific Foundation of Canada. She said, “There's no two ways there was a diplomatic crisis and we're still dealing with the aftereffects. But, at the same time, we can see that other parts of their relationships are resilient.” Trade and investment continue, and provinces like Saskatchewan and Ontario have been amenable to forging stronger ties. “I think we'll have to see on balance the long-term potential of the relationship is very much there and it's strong,” she said.