Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Carvin"


3 mentions found


Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau attends a press conference following Canada's expulsion of six Indian diplomats, in Ottawa on October 14, 2024. Members of the Hindu Sikh Global Forum protest the clashes between Hindu and Sikh communities in Canada in New Delhi, India, on November 9, 2024. However, the Canadian prime minister recently acknowledged that Khalistan separatists “do not represent the Sikh community” in Canada. A downward spiral of relationsWhile the Khalistan issue has persisted for decades, relations between Canada and India have plummeted under Modi and Trudeau. India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi (L) walks alongside Home Affairs Minister Amit Shah outside a polling station during India's general election, in Ahmedabad, India, on May 7, 2024.
Persons: Justin Trudeau, Hardeep Singh Nijjar, Dave Chang, , Narendra Modi’s, , Amit Shah –, Shah, Hardeep Singh, Cole Burston, Modi, Trudeau, , Michael Kugelman, Indira Gandhi, Stephanie Carvin, Sanchit Khanna, ” Carvin, Harsh Pant, Narendra Modi, Amit Shah, Adnan Abidi, ” Kugelman, Joe Biden, Biden, Eraldo Peres, ” Modi, Kugelman, Pant, Canada’s, ” Pant Organizations: CNN, Canadian, Sikh, Khalistan, Indian, Getty Images, Bharatiya Janata Party, New Zealand –, South Asia Institute, Wilson Center, Ottawa’s Carleton University ., Air India, Sikh Global Forum, Hindustan Times, Research Foundation, India's, Home, Reuters, Indian Army, CBC, Canadians, US, Observer Research Foundation Locations: Canadian, Brampton, Toronto, Canada, India, Indian, Ottawa, AFP, Delhi, New Delhi, United States, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Asia, Pacific, New York City, Washington , DC, Mumbai, Montreal, Carvin, Local, Ahmedabad, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Modi, Brampton’s
"India is important in Western calculations for balancing China, and Canada is not," said Stephanie Carvin, a professor of international relations at Ottawa's Carleton University. A free trade deal would be a "major political win" for both India and Britain, Bajpaee said. Reuters Graphics'WAITING GAME'White House national security adviser John Kirby said the United States was "deeply concerned" and encouraged Indian officials to cooperate in any investigation. Britain, the United States, Canada and others threw out more than 100 Russian diplomats to punish Moscow for an attack it has always denied carrying out. Canada has not made public the intelligence it has because there is an active murder investigation, the senior source said.
Persons: Narendra Modi, Justin Trudeau, Evan Vucci, Stephanie Carvin, Hardeep Singh Nijjar, James, Chietigj Bajpaee, Bajpaee, John Kirby, Trudeau, Kirby, Sergei Skripal, Yulia, Wesley Wark, Canada's, Richard Fadden, Steve Scherer, David Ljunggren, Andrew MacAskill, Jonathan Oatis Organizations: Indian, Canada, Bharat, Ottawa's Carleton University, Chatham House, Reuters Graphics, White House, Washington Post, week's, Centre for International Governance Innovation, Canadian Security Intelligence Service, CTV, Thomson Locations: New Delhi, India, Britain, China Canada, OTTAWA, Canada, United States, China, Ottawa, Australia, New Zealand, London, England, Moscow, Waterloo , Ontario
But the theme of the event is continuity — of President Xi Jinping as leader, and with that the likelihood of friction with the U.S.-led West. Xi, China’s most powerful leader in decades, is poised to secure an unprecedented third term at this week’s twice-a-decade National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party in Beijing. “Those achievements have certainly strengthened the president’s leadership.”Under Xi, China’s gross domestic product has more than doubled to $17.7 trillion. Born in Beijing in 1953, Xi enjoyed a privileged youth as the second son of Xi Zhongxun, a Chinese communist revolutionary. “The long-term goals of President Xi, as well as general attitudes in the West, will make it very difficult for us to have more cooperation during his third term,” she said.
Total: 3