Integrity Score 612
No Records Found
No Records Found
Canada has always given space to extremist rather it's Khalistanis or Nazis.
So, before Canada became a safe haven for Khalistani terrorists, it harboured Nazi war criminals.
The issue has again taken centre stage after a packed Canadian Parliament unwittingly gave a standing ovation to a Nazi veteran this week (September 25).
Yaroslav Hunka, a Polish-born Ukrainian who served in one of Adolf Hitler's Waffen SS units during World War II, was introduced as a “war hero” by Speaker Anthony Rota. The fallout has been such that Speaker Rota had to resign from his post and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau formally apologized for the “terrible mistake”.
Canada has been a land of immigrants, has promoted free speech and encouraged assimilation. But both these liberal qualities have somehow helped the Khalistanis and the Nazi war criminals.
“Canada has a really dark history with Nazis in Canada,” Immigration Minister Marc Miller was quoted by The Canadian Press as saying. Miller said that Canada could revisit calls to declassify documents about the presence of Nazi war criminals in the country.