Toronto [Canada], Following the arrest of three Indian nationals over alleged links to the killing of India-designated terrorist Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a vocal comment made by External Affairs Minister (EAM) S Jaishankar on the issue, Canada's Immigration Minister Mark Miller Has done. Responding to a reporter's question on Jaishankar's comments on these arrests, Minister Miller said, "We are not lax. And the Indian Foreign Minister is entitled to his opinion." I will let them speak their mind. That's just not accurate," as broadcast on Canada's specialty television channel Cable Public Affairs Channel (CPAC), the foreign minister recently said while criticizing Canada for targeting people with links to organized crime in India. Are welcoming from.Ignoring warnings New Delhi. When pressed on whether the accused persons were on student visas, Mill avoided giving specific details, citing the ongoing police investigation. H said that such an investigation should be directed to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP). Jaishankar criticized the Justin Trudeau-led government for giving space and legitimacy to "supporters of extremism, separatism and violence" in the name of free speech. 5 said Canada is issuing visas to people associated with organized crime despite warnings from New Delhi.Jaishankar said some people with 'pro-Pakistan inclinations' in Canada have organized themselves politically and have grown into an influential political lobby. He was shot dead after leaving a gurudwara in Surrey in June last year. A video clip of his murder reportedly surfaced in March this year, purportedly showing Nijjar being fatally shot by the assailants in what was claimed to be a 'contract killing'. In 2023, the Canadian PM alleged an Indian hand in the murder, a claim which India vehemently denied and described as 'absurd and motivated'. The Canadian police have also not provided any evidence linking India to the murder.On May 4, Canadian police released photographs of three people arrested in Nijjar's murder. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) in a statement named the three men, all Indian nationals, Karanpreet Singh, 28, Kamalpreet Singh, 22, and Karan Brar, 22, and released their photographs. All three were arrested from Edmonton city of Alberta.