Be nice, or you’re not coming in

This article was first published in the Spring 2024 issue of Index on Censorship. We are republishing it here after Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau accused India of making a “horrific mistake” in violating Canadian sovereignty at an inquiry into the death of Hardeep Singh Nijjar.

Last June, Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a 45-year-old Sikh activist campaigning for Khalistan, a separate homeland for his co-religionists, was shot dead in British Columbia, Canada.

The murder happened in a car park, and a video emerged of his body collapsed over the steering wheel. Three months later, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau claimed there were “credible allegations” that the Indian government was involved in the murder. India reacted angrily, terming Trudeau’s charge “absurd”. India removed diplomats from Canada, asked Canada to reduce its diplomatic presence in India, and significantly delayed Canadian visa applications. The USA, Canada’s closest ally, expressed concern but did not say more.

In recent years, India’s strategic importance has increased for three reasons: its growing economy, its outwardly democratic credentials and its potential emergence as the counterweight to China – not only in Asia but on the international stage.

Western governments have been queuing up to invite Prime Minister Narendra Modi to visit their countries and rolling out the red carpet for him, or they’ve been visiting India and announcing investment deals – even if actual inflows may be puny compared with the bombastic claims.

Sikhs and India

Sikhs form about 2% of India’s population, and most of them live in the fertile and prosperous state of Punjab along with Hindus, Muslims and others. In the early-1970s, the Shiromani Akali Dal, a political party representing Sikh and Punjabi interests, passed a resolution seeking greater autonomy. By the late 1970s, a militant movement emerged, seeking an independent homeland called Khalistan, carved out of India.

Extremists representing Khalistani interests attacked government targets and terrorised civilians. Many militants garrisoned themselves in the holiest Sikh shrine, Amritsar’s Golden Temple, and in June 1984 then prime minister Indira Gandhi sent troops into the temple to eliminate the threat.

Hundreds died in what became known as Operation Bluestar. Four months later, on 31 October, Gandhi was assassinated by two of her bodyguards – both Sikh. In the retaliatory violence that followed, thousands of Sikhs were killed in northern India.

Indian security forces pursued the militants ruthlessly, and the Khalistan movement subsided. It survives among Sikhs abroad who dream of an independent Sikh nation, but in India there is little support for Sikh separatism.

However, Sikhs overseas and in India remember the attack on the Golden Temple, the pogrom of Sikhs in 1984 and the lack of justice. While Indian leaders have since expressed regret over the violence, and a Sikh economist – Manmohan Singh – was India’s prime minister from 2004 until 2014, the wounds have not healed. That accounts for the nostalgic longing for an independent homeland among some Sikhs abroad.

Nijjar’s killing would have remained largely forgotten, but in November the USA charged an Indian national, Nikhil Gupta, with attempting to hire an assassin to kill Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, a Sikh separatist leader who is the general counsel for Sikhs for Justice and who lives in the USA. Gupta, the USA alleged, was acting under the directions of an Indian government official and had offered $100,000 to a potential assassin.

He did not know that the man he was trying to hire was, in fact, a US agent, and Gupta is now in a Czech jail, awaiting extradition to the USA.

While the Indian government denied any role, its response to the US charge was more muted and less full of bluster than its response to Trudeau. US President Joe Biden was invited as the guest of honour to India’s day of pomp and glory – the Republic Day parade – in January this year. Biden did not make the trip and while he did not give any specific reason, diplomatic circles believe it was meant as a snub to India, which has elections later this year. The incumbent Modi would have loved the footage of Biden by his side, watching the might of India’s defence forces marching by.

There is no evidence of India’s role in either Nijjar’s murder or the plot against Pannun, and they could just as easily have been rogue operations. But the US charge-sheet is fairly detailed, and India’s subdued response raises questions. India’s current government has long admired the long reach of Israel’s Mossad, which has a record of carrying out spectacular attacks against those Israel considers its enemies.

Could some Indian officials have been tempted to imitate Israel as a form of flattery?

Transnational repression

Carrying out violent acts against individuals or organisations that a government considers hostile to its interests in a friendly country is an extreme form of transnational repression. But India has practised many other subtler forms of preventing contact between Indian dissidents seeking a global platform and foreign researchers or journalists wishing to report on India. It has expelled journalists, prevented academics from entering the country, stopped its own journalists or human rights activists from travel and got Indian embassies to complain loudly against foreign reporting of India.

Most recently, Vanessa Dougnac, who had been the longest-staying foreign correspondent in India, said she would leave the country after India revoked her status as an Overseas Citizen of India (OCI). (She is married to an Indian national, and so qualifies for such a status.) The title is misleading: OCI does not grant any citizenship rights such as the right to vote, but it grants the individual a permanent, long-stay visa and the ability to work (except in certain sectors). Dougnac was told her reporting for various French publications created a “biased, negative” perception of India. She wrote a heartfelt lament while leaving the country she considers her own, saying the government’s onerous conditions made it impossible for her to work there.

Earlier, the overseas citizenship of Ashok Swain, who teaches peace and conflict studies at Uppsala University in Sweden, was revoked. In November 2020, Swain was informed his OCI would be revoked because of his “inflammatory speeches” and “anti-India activities”. Swain asked for specific instances and requested for the decision to be overturned so he could visit his unwell mother back in India. His request was denied.

Swain sued the government, and in July 2023 the court ruled in his favour, saying the government needed to provide proper reasons. Later that month, the Indian embassy in Stockholm sent him another note, long on rhetoric and short on specifics, saying he was “hurting religious sentiments”, “destabilising” India’s social fabric and “spreading hate propaganda”. Swain was tweeting too much and too critically about India, the order said, hurting the country’s image abroad. Swain’s case will be heard in May.

The OCI status was created not as a right but as a privilege or an entitlement, because people of Indian origin who lived abroad had been clamouring for dual nationality, which Indian laws don’t permit. It was created in 2005 under the 1955 Citizenship Act, which allows foreign citizens of Indian origin or foreigners married to Indian citizens to enter the country without a visa and reside, work and hold property there, among other benefits.

But lately the government is wary of OCI journalists and academics visiting or living in the country, especially if the government does not like their reporting or investigations. In March 2021, India required OCIs to seek a permit to conduct research, for mountaineering, for missionary, journalistic or Tablighi (a Muslim sect) activities, or to visit any area of India deemed as “protected”.

According to the human rights and law-focused web portal Article 14, which has examined the issue in great detail, more than 4.5 million people around the world are OCIs, and data released by the government in response to an inquiry under India’s Right to Information Act, showed that the Modi administration had cancelled at least 102 OCI cards between 2014 and May 2023. In theory, those whose OCIs are cancelled can apply for a regular visa to visit India, but the government reserves the right to blacklist them which would, in effect, bar them forever from entering the country.

In November 2022, 82-year-old UK-based activist Amrit Wilson received a letter that tore to shreds her official ties with India. The letter, from the Indian high commission, blamed her for “anti-India activities” and for making “detrimental propaganda” which was “inimical” to India’s sovereignty and integrity. There was, of course, no evidence – but she was asked to provide reasons within a fortnight why her status should not be revoked. Wilson sent a detailed response, but several months later the government replied that her response wasn’t “plausible”, and cancelled her status. She is now appealing through the Indian court system. In its response, the government pointed out some of her tweets for being critical of the government and an article that opposed the revoking of the special status granted to the erstwhile state of Jammu and Kashmir.

The government claims it can cancel the status of those who have shown “disaffection to the constitution” or “assisted an enemy during war”, or done anything that it believes is against the interests of “sovereignty, integrity and security” of India.

Chetan Ahimsa (Kumar), a leading actor in Kannada films, had his status revoked briefly, too. Ahimsa is a US citizen. He was arrested in India after he criticised a ban on Muslim students wearing the hijab in schools in the southern state of Karnataka. In court, the government said India could expel people who were “undesirable” and foreigners did not have the right to free speech in India. The court stayed the cancellation.

More famously, in 2019, the USA-based writer Aatish Taseer, whose mother is the Indian journalist Tavleen Singh and whose father is the slain Pakistani politician Salman Taseer, had his overseas citizenship cancelled after he wrote a cover story in Time magazine asking if India could survive another five years of Modi.

In Taseer’s case, the government claimed his status was revoked because he had “concealed” the fact that his father was a Pakistani national. Earlier, in 2014, Christine Mehta, a researcher at Amnesty International, had her OCI revoked after she studied India’s human rights record in Jammu and Kashmir.

A gigantic conspiracy?

A web-based portal called Disinfo Lab has, according to a report in The Washington Post, been compiling information of critics overseas, Indian or not, and blaming them for undermining India. The portal establishes links between the critics and the philanthropic billionaire George Soros, sometimes by connecting disconnected dots, to present an image of a gigantic conspiracy.

At the same time, foreign-based web portals critical of India are being taken offline inside the country. The latest to suffer such erasure is Hindutva Watch, which compiled human rights violations by Hindu fundamentalists. India has escalated demands on X, formerly Twitter, and many accounts critical of the government have been “withheld” recently, including those operated by foreigners who live abroad. X has complied, but issued a statement expressing disapproval of the government’s action. Clearly, X’s owner Elon Musk, who claims to champion free speech, has a different standard for different countries, and in the Indian case, he has meekly complied with many requests.

Academics are also being turned away. Within weeks of Modi’s election in 2014, Penny Vera-Sanso, of Birkbeck University in London, who had been visiting India since 1990 and writes about gender, was denied entry. In 2022, Lindsay Bremner, who teaches architecture at the University of Westminster, had a valid research visa when she arrived in India, but was told at the airport that she could not enter. Earlier that year, Flippo Osella, who teaches anthropology at the University of Sussex, was sent back. He is an expert on Kerala and has been visiting India for 30 years. The government claimed his research on caste was deemed “sensitive”. Osella understands Malayalam and has studied the Ezhava community. He has written about Mamootty, a popular actor in Kerala, and was working with local institutions on predicting weather. His research was supported by the UK government, but he was treated brusquely and not allowed to contact friends in India.

India has also barred writers and academics who have tourist visas but who might conduct research, which would technically violate Indian rules. In 2018, Kathryn Hummel, an Australian poet, was turned away at Bangalore airport and Pakistani researcher Annie Zaman was similarly sent back and prevented from attending a conference in Delhi. When I sought out some of the academics denied entry, none of them wanted to speak, on or off the record, because they did not wish to jeopardise their visas in the future. Some American journalists, Indian origin or otherwise, too have had visa requests delayed or denied.

When graduate students and academics at several US universities organised a three-day conference in 2021 called Dismantling Global Hindutva, which examined the rise of Hindu nationalism in India and its effects on Indian society, several academics and potential speakers were warned off from participating, and a few backed out, so as not to jeopardise future visits to India. Indian residents in the USA who support the Indian government wrote to faculty heads and university administrators complaining against those academics. Academics in the USA who are of Indian origin and are critical of India have frequently been targeted by concerted efforts from pro-government overseas Indians, calling for their dismissal or for them to be disciplined.

Several journalists and human rights activists living in India find themselves mired in legal cases, which means they must have clearance from courts or other appropriate authorities before leaving the country. This has prevented several writers and human rights activists from participating at events overseas.
Others with clean records also find that they are suspect. Sanna Irshad Mattoo, a Kashmiri photojournalist whose photographs earned her the Pulitzer Prize in 2022, was prevented from leaving for Paris to launch a book featuring her work, even though she had a valid French visa.
India is erecting a barrier between scholars and their subjects, reporters and their stories, and closing off doors and windows, narrowing Indian minds and hardening outlooks.

And it flexes its muscles abroad, shouting at critics, preventing their travel and access, and – if the Canadian and US accusations are true – attempting to eliminate those it disagrees with.

But it will hold elections in a few months, and encomiums praising the world’s largest democracy will follow. Naturally.

A chilling update from Belarus

As Belarus approaches the 30th anniversary of Aliaksandr Lukashenka’s autocratic rule, repression by the regime against those who stand for democracy and freedom is not getting any less severe.

This summer marks three decades since Lukashenka’s first inauguration and four years since the Belarusian pro-democratic revolution erupted following his controversial 2020 presidential election win over political newbie Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya. Despite the ongoing democratic movement led by Tsikhanouskaya, which keeps Belarus on the international agenda, the regime relentlessly cracks down on civil society both inside the country and in exile.

As of today, more than 1,400 political prisoners are behind bars in Belarus. During a recent visit to Washington, Tsikhanouskaya highlighted the scale of the repression by comparing these 1,400 prisoners to what would be 45,000 political prisoners in the United States. Many activists argue that support for Belarusians who flee their homeland could be stronger. Maria Rudz, co-chair of Razam, a Belarusian diaspora group in Germany, reported that out of 1,000 asylum applications from Belarusians, only 40 received positive decisions.

It is also crucial to remember that those jailed on politically motivated charges in Belarus endure inhumane treatment in prisons. Many imprisoned leaders of the pro-democratic movement are held incommunicado: Siarhei Tsikhanouski for 471 days, Maryia Kalesnikava for over 493 days, Mikalai Statkevich for 498 days, Maksim Znak for 499 days, and Viktar Babaryka for 502 days. Lukashenka is acutely aware that these leaders have inspired both Belarusians and the democratic world since the summer of 2020. Now, serving unjust sentences ranging from 10 to 18 years, they are deprived of freedom of speech and kept in silence as Lukashenka’s hostages.

Nevertheless, Belarusians inside the country and in exile have loud voices and activists continue their work from abroad. This persistence frustrates the regime, which cannot silence Tsikhanouskaya, her team, leaders of the diaspora and Belarusian NGOs. As a new tactic, the regime has begun conducting trials in absentia since 2023. On 20 June, Franak Viačorka, one of Tsikhanouskaya’s advisors, was sentenced in absentia to 20 years and fined 17,000 euro. Viačorka says that such attempts to disrupt their work are not fruitful: “It was not a trial but a farce. Lukashenka is a fraud, and his terror will not stop us from fighting for a free Belarus.”

Sadly, this has become common practice. Human rights activist Leanid Sudalenka from Viasna, who served an unjust sentence in Belarus and subsequently left the country, received another five-year sentence, in absentia. Several of his colleagues from Viasna remain behind bars, including Valiantsin Stefanovich, Marfa Rabkova and 2022 Nobel Peace Prize winner Ales Bialiatski .

The regime sometimes manages to put pressure on Belarusians even across international borders. The Serbian High Court has ruled that activist Andrei Hniot should be extradited back to Belarus due to charges brought by the regime. Hniot has filed an appeal, citing persecution by the regime. Following the court’s decision in Belgrade, Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya immediately called for support for Hniot through an open letter.

To get an insight into the work that Tsikhanouskaya is doing, readers in London can attend the screening of the British documentary The Accidental President about 17 July at the Bertha DocHouse in The Brunswick in London’s West End. The movie, which follows Tsikhanouskaya as she is thrust onto the world stage as Belarus’s de facto head of state in exile, will be followed by a Q&A session with directors Mike Lerner and Martin Herring.

One-way ticket to freedom?

Within a few hours of Ghanem al Masarir accepting the invitation to perform at Index’s January comedy night – an event centred on dissent – the Saudi satirist had sent over a script of what he wanted to say.

It was great – funny, pacey and laced with on-the-nose jokes about Saudi’s Crown Prince that you’d want from a dissident. The only problem was it was a bit short for his allocated timeslot. Could he expand it?

His reply was to pull out of the event entirely. He told me his mental health was in such a state that he didn’t think he could do it. We’d spoken in the morning, a time when he typically feels more robust. By the afternoon he’d been having doubts and was concerned that, as per his current pattern, he’d be unable to muster the strength to perform at a night-time event. My request for a bit more bulk tipped him over the edge.

Al Masarir’s message was disappointing, but it was not unpredictable. The Saudi authorities have been terrorising him for years, in a way that is intended to destroy his mental, as much as his physical, health.

He arrived in the UK in 2003 when he came to study. He was in his early 20s and had no intention to stay, but while he was here he encountered Saudi opposition – a fact that made its way back to Saudi authorities who, in al Masarir’s words, went crazy.

“They wanted to make my life miserable. If you visit Osama bin Laden they’re fine with that, but not if you visit opposition,” he told Index.

Al Masarir said the harassment took the form of trying to discredit his reputation and thereby limit his professional opportunities, as well as illegal actions such as stealing his car (it apparently later showed up in Dubai) and hacking his bank account.

His first job was recruiting students from the Middle East to study in the UK, something he was driven out of after several people he recruited were themselves threatened.

In 2015, al Masarir turned his hand to comedy. He set up a YouTube channel on which he’d post satirical videos, talk show-host style, about the Saudi state. The videos were watched by tens of thousands, mostly from Saudi Arabia – a testament to the hunger in the country for this kind of content (“black messages”, as al Masarir calls them), which he thought would be more effective in their messaging than more formal content.

Throughout this time al Masarir was still in contact with his family. That ended in 2017 following a campaign where he called on people in Saudi Arabia to upload their own videos (which some did, using VPNs to protect themselves). The Saudi authorities promptly pressured his family to cut ties and he hasn’t spoken to any of them since – an obviously painful fact, and one that he says he tries not to think about too much in a bid to stay positive.

I wanted to meet al Masarir, to speak to him face to face. But he is evasive. Then he tells me he rarely leaves his London home.

“I used to go to Hyde Park to walk around. I’d meet people in the city centre. Now I don’t,” he said.

In 2018, al Masarir was outside Harrods in central London when he was badly beaten by men who, it is believed, were hired by the Saudi state. (Citizen Lab confirmed that his phone had been hacked using Pegasus spyware.)

While al Masarir was lucky to get away without anything broken, the same could not be said of his spirit. “They destroyed me emotionally,” he said.

“The UK is a great country and everything is amazing, but I think the UK is too close to the Saudis. You run away from the evil Saudis and they can reach you in the West.”

At the same time, they destroyed him financially, blocking his videos in Saudi Arabia and asking YouTube on occasion to take them down. He said they obliged.

Al Masarir must have had a morsel of strength left, though, because in 2022 he made the unprecedented move of suing the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia in the UK for hacking his phone and for the 2018 assault. He won the case, only to have the Saudis appeal it a year later. They lost, and today al Masarir is awaiting the outcome of the damages they owe him, and he hopes to get what he deserves for what they’ve done to him.

Is there a number that can be put on that? The short answer is “No”.

“I’m now 43. I’ve lost the best years of my life. I don’t think I can get that back,” he said.

His case could help other hacking victims in the UK sue foreign governments who order similar attacks, and thereby dissuade those governments from such conduct.

“I hope it sends a message to not commit these sorts of crimes in a sovereign country. Saudi should not be allowed to do what they have done,” al Masarir said.

On the day of the Index event, my phone buzzes. It’s al Masarir sending over an extra part for the script. He still doesn’t have the strength to perform on stage, but the fact that he can write it – and that he wants others to see it – is something.

You can read the routine that Ghanem planned to deliver here.

Having the last laugh: A celebration of dissidence

Hey everybody, how’s it going tonight? Good? Awesome! So, I’ve been thinking a lot about dissidence lately. You know, the art of going against the grain, challenging the status quo, and basically being a rebel with a cause. Or without a cause. Because, let’s be honest, sometimes rebellion is its own cause, right?

I mean, who here has ever disagreed with something just for the sake of it? Come on, raise your hands. Yeah, that’s what I’m talking about. Dissidence is like the rebellious teenager of adulthood. It’s that little voice in your head saying: “Hey, why not take the road less travelled? It might have better snacks.”

I recently had this realisation that dissidence is like a muscle. The more you use it, the stronger it gets. And sometimes it gets so strong that you find yourself questioning everything. I questioned my morning coffee once. I asked it: “Are you really the best part of waking up, or is that just a catchy jingle?”

You ever notice how dissidence has its own soundtrack? Like, rebellion comes with its own playlist. The moment you decide to go against the flow, suddenly punk rock becomes your theme music. I once played Anarchy in the UK while doing my taxes. It didn’t make them more enjoyable, but at least I felt like a financial maverick.

Of course, with dissidence comes critics. People who just can’t handle you breaking the mould. I had someone tell me: “Why are you always going against the grain?”

I said: “Have you tried the other side of the bread? It’s pretty delicious.”

But hey, dissidence is not for everyone. It’s an acquired taste, like cilantro or political debates at Thanksgiving.

You know who the real rebels are? People who assemble furniture without reading the instructions. They’re out there, living on the edge, defying the laws of Swedish design. And let me tell you, that’s a rebellion I can get behind. Screw you, Allen key!

Speaking of defying expectations, did you hear about Mohammed bin Salman’s visit to the UK? They were so worried about him carrying a bone-saw that they installed metal detectors at Buckingham Palace. Turns out, the Queen wasn’t a fan of impromptu home improvements.

But hey, let’s not be too hard on them. Maybe they just wanted to make sure he wasn’t planning a surprise visit to the Tower of London gift shop.

And speaking of surprises, have you caught wind of the new Saudi Arabian cooking show? It’s called Dissident Chef. Contestants compete to make the most revolutionary dish without getting censored… The winner gets a lifetime supply of olive oil and a free subscription to Cooking in Exile magazine.

They say the secret ingredient is dissent, but good luck finding that in the spice aisle.

You know you’re in Saudi Arabia when the government hires GPS for its dissidents. “In 500 metres, make a U-turn to the nearest detention centre. Failure to comply may result in unexpected travel plans to a place with less Wi-Fi.”

I heard the Saudi government is introducing a new reality show. It’s called Dissidence Island. Contestants compete to see who can question authority the longest without disappearing. Spoiler alert: the winner gets a one-way ticket to Freedom Island – also known as exile.
In conclusion, let’s celebrate dissidence. Embrace your inner rebel, question the norms and remember that, sometimes, the best way to have the last laugh is by being the one who laughs first. Cheers to the misfits, the contrarians and the ones who refuse to colour inside the lines!

Thank you, everyone! You’ve been a fantastic crowd. And remember, if life gives you lemons, make dissident lemonade. Goodnight!

SUPPORT INDEX'S WORK