Khalistan Takes Over the Streets of Calgary

by Antariksh Singh

AI Generated Summary

  • On Saturday, May 9, Calgary’s streets were hijacked by the Khalistani elements during the “Nagar Kirtan” parade — a bloated spectacle that exposed the ugly truth about radical Khalistan extremism still thriving in Canada.
  • Road closures, traffic chaos, and an estimated 80,000 attendees forced ordinary Calgarians to foot the bill for policing and cleanup while extremists celebrated the breakup of a democratic nation.
  • Khalistan — the bankrupt dream of a Sikh ethno-state — has zero legitimacy (or demand) in India, yet Canadian soil has become its safe playground, thanks to the previous administration’s encouragement.

On Saturday, May 9, Calgary’s streets were hijacked by the Khalistani elements during the “Nagar Kirtan” parade — a bloated spectacle that exposed the ugly truth about radical Khalistan extremism still thriving in Canada. Tens of thousands marched from the Dashmesh Culture Centre to Prairie Winds Park, but the real stars were the Khalistan flags flapping proudly in the wind. What was billed as a harmless cultural festival quickly devolved into an open-air rally for a violent, imaginary, self-serving movement.

This wasn’t innocent religious devotion. It was a deliberate provocation. Khalistan — the bankrupt dream of a Sikh ethno-state — has zero legitimacy (or demand) in India, yet Canadian soil has become its safe playground, thanks to the previous administration’s encouragement. Participants openly brandished symbols tied to terrorism and extremism, turning a public event into a festival of division. Road closures, traffic chaos, and an estimated 80,000 attendees forced ordinary Calgarians to foot the bill for policing and cleanup while extremists celebrated the breakup of a democratic nation.

Previous governments had bent over backward to appease noisy diaspora lobbies, turning multiculturalism into a suicide pact. While India fought actual threats, Ottawa chose to look the other way as Khalistani radicals fundraise, intimidate moderates, and poison young Canadian-born Sikhs with hatred. The result? Strained diplomatic ties with a key partner under Justin Trudeau, eroded public trust, and a city forced to host foreign grievances it never asked for.

This weekend’s disgrace wasn’t an isolated parade — it was a warning. Until Canada stops coddling Khalistani extremism and starts prioritizing its own citizens over imported feuds, events like this will keep poisoning the streets and international reputation. Enough is enough. Khalistan belongs in the dustbin of history, not on Calgary’s taxpayer-funded boulevards.

Antariksh Singh

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