RAW will never confirm but Hardeep Singh Nijjar looks like a RAW hit

Hardeep Singh Nijjar shot dead: Over the years, extremist factions plotting against India’s integrity have operated comfortably from the distant lands of Canada, Pakistan, Malaysia, and beyond. However, recent events suggest that the tables might be turning, as high-profile extremists are falling one after the other.

Let’s analyze in detail the deaths of extremists like Hardeep Singh Nijjar, and why this might be a RAW hit even without the direct involvement of the RAW!

Hardeep Singh Nijjar shot dead!

The assassination of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, associated with the banned separatist organization, Sikhs for Justice (SFJ), and on the most-wanted list of 40 designated terrorists in India, sent ripples across the world. The incident occurred at the Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara in Surrey, Canada, just a year after Nijjar was declared wanted by India’s National Investigation Agency (NIA) for conspiring to kill Hindu priests in Jalandhar.

The extermination of Hardeep Singh Nijjar is not an isolated incident; it appears to be part of a coordinated and systematic campaign against both Islamic extremists and Sikh separatists linked to India. This emerging pattern of targeted hits, though never publicly acknowledged by India’s intelligence agency Research and Analysis Wing (RAW), strongly suggests a direct or indirect involvement.

Also read: How did separatist Avtar Singh Khanda meet his end: An overlook

In a seemingly synchronized effort, extremists around the globe are being apprehended or neutralized. This includes Harpreet Singh, alias ‘Happy Malaysia’, arrested at Indira Gandhi International Airport, New Delhi upon his arrival from Kuala Lumpur, and the arrest of Goldy Brar, the mastermind behind Sidhu Moose Wala’s criminal activities, in California.

This is no anomaly!

The series of hits extends to Pakistan, with the sudden death of Harvinder Singh Rinda, a notorious gangster-turned-terrorist, in a hospital in Lahore, reportedly due to a ‘drug overdose’. Paramjeet Singh Panjwar, a leading figure of the Khalistan Commando Force, was also assassinated outside his hideout in Lahore.

India’s crackdown on extremism isn’t confined to its own borders or neighboring Pakistan. In Thailand, Khalistani terrorist Kulwinderjit Singh, alias Khanpuria, was deported, only to be arrested by the NIA immediately upon landing at the Indira Gandhi International Airport. Happy Sanghera, a gangster hailing from Bastiwala village, near Makhu in Ferozepur, met his untimely end in Italy.

Even the Hizbul Muzahideen ‘launching chief’ Bashir Ahmad Peer, couldn’t escape this crackdown, as he was gunned down by unidentified assailants in Rawalpindi, Pakistan. Syed Khalid Raza, a close associate of notorious extremist Syed Salahuddin, suffered a similar fate in Karachi. Let’s not forget Zahoor Ibrahim Mistry, the hijacker of an Indian Airlines flight, who was also exterminated in almost a similar pattern.

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Is RAW really involved?

The string of these high-profile exterminations signals a newfound resilience and proactiveness in India’s counter-terrorism efforts. While it’s a far cry from the days when these extremists, sitting comfortably in foreign lands, conspired to disrupt India’s peace and unity, the recent events have led to an inescapable conclusion.

A day that many might not have envisaged is here, where India’s self-proclaimed enemies are starting to fall like pins. While RAW may never publicly confirm its role in these exterminations, the pattern strongly indicates a significant, if not direct, involvement. As the crackdown continues, it offers a stark warning to extremists worldwide – no matter where they are, their actions against India will not go unpunished.

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