India has expressed severe concerns to London over the banned pro-Khalistan group Sikh for Justice holding a plebiscite on the secession of Punjab on October 31. National Security Adviser Ajit Doval has made it clear to his UK colleague Stephen Lovegrove that the Modi government rejects equipping a small element of the Indian diaspora in the UK to have a vote on the affairs of a third country.
Sikh for Justice, a Khalistani terrorist organisation located in the United States that is banned in India, staged the first round of a so-called referendum referendum, which took place a few weeks ago in London, was a flop, despite the fact that over 2,000 people attended.
The SFJ has been calling for the creation of a separate country, Khalistan. British Sikhs are said to have travelled to London to vote on whether Punjab should become its own country. SFJ would vote in other cities across the United Kingdom (UK), then vote in Europe, the United States, and Canada before travelling to India.
India made it obvious that there was complete peace in Punjab, with extreme Sikh elements failing to receive even 1% of the vote in the five-year assembly or Lok Sabha elections. The Modi government expressed grave worry that the UK government is turning a blind eye to Sikh banned groups' open radicalisation of the Indian diaspora in order to advance their separatist objective.
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