Campaigners have accused India’s intelligence agency of targeting the diaspora
Hardeep Singh Nijjar may have been on heightened alert as he left a Sikh temple in Surrey, British Columbia one evening in June.
The Sikh leader had recently received a call from the Canadian intelligence services warning him that his life might be in danger.
Then again, the 45-year-old may have felt protected by his surroundings. He was in a pickup truck in the shadow of his local Gurdwara. It was a Sunday, and the car park was busy.
Either way, he hadn’t noticed the two heavyset, masked men who had spent the last hour waiting for him.