The Bishnoi Gang Visa-Screening Test: Public Safety Cannot Be an Afterthought
A viral reel gets the anger right but risks getting the target wrong. Gang crime is not a community. It is a security failure — and Ottawa should answer with screening, enforcement and deportation receipts.
A Facebook reel circulating this weekend shows a commentator reacting to reports about the Bishnoi Gang and extortion threats in Canada. The clip uses blunt language about “Indian gangs,” immigration and Liberal policy. It is angry, and the anger is understandable. But the responsible political argument needs to be sharper than the viral version.
The issue is not ethnicity. It is not the Sikh community, the Indian community, students as a class, or newcomers as a class. The issue is whether Canada’s government allowed a dangerous transnational criminal network to operate here while the immigration and enforcement systems moved too slowly to protect Canadians.
That is the public-safety question Mark Carney’s Liberals cannot dodge: if suspects tied to an extortion network entered through temporary streams, who screened them, who monitored the risk, and how fast can Canada remove people who abuse visas to threaten Canadians?
Correct the viral claim, keep the real issue
The reel says gang figures were threatening the RCMP with “over 8,000 guns for hire.” The reported Global News claim is different: a letter warning of 1,000 gunmen. That distinction matters. If the public case is exaggerated, the government gets an easy way to dismiss the whole concern.
So do not exaggerate it. One thousand is alarming enough.
Ottawa listed the Bishnoi Gang as a terrorist entity in 2025. The government described it as a transnational criminal group involved in murder, shootings and arson, with activity connected to extortion and intimidation. FINTRAC has also warned about financial activity linked to suspected laundering of proceeds from south-Asian-based organized crime, including extortion.
That is not social-media panic. That is a public record.
The Liberal failure is systems failure
For years, the federal Liberals massively expanded temporary resident pathways while insisting the system could handle the volume. Canadians were told that high intake, student permits, temporary work permits and weak enforcement were all manageable if people just trusted the bureaucracy.
Now communities are dealing with extortion threats, shootings, intimidation and fear. Business owners are being warned. Police are stretched. Families are asking whether the people threatening them should have been in the country in the first place.
That is not racism. That is the basic duty of a sovereign country.
A serious immigration system welcomes people who come lawfully, work honestly and contribute to Canada. A serious immigration system also removes people who exploit that welcome to commit crimes, join gangs, intimidate communities or act as tools of foreign-state pressure.
The communities most harmed deserve protection
The Liberals and their media allies often try to turn every enforcement question into a morality play. But weak enforcement does not protect immigrant communities. It often hurts them first.
Extortion networks prey on diaspora communities. They pressure families, businesses and religious communities. They weaponize fear, identity and overseas connections. When Ottawa fails to act early, the people who suffer are often the same communities politicians claim to defend.
That is why the argument should be direct and disciplined:
- Do not blame communities for gang networks.
- Do not smear lawful students, workers or immigrants.
- Do demand serious screening, faster removals and public enforcement numbers.
- Do ask why temporary pathways became so large before Ottawa proved it could police abuse.
- Do require transparency on how many suspects entered through which visa stream, and what warning signs were missed.
The questions Carney should answer
Mark Carney inherited a Liberal immigration system built under Trudeau, but he owns it now. If he wants Canadians to believe his government can restore competence, he should answer basic questions in public:
- How many people tied to the Bishnoi extortion investigation entered Canada on student permits, work permits, visitor visas, asylum claims or other temporary pathways?
- How many are removable from Canada today?
- How many removal orders have been issued?
- How many are still in Canada?
- What intelligence was shared with IRCC before visas were issued?
- What new screening rules apply to regions, networks or applicants tied to extortion risk?
- How will Ottawa protect business owners and families being targeted now?
Those answers can be provided without compromising live investigations. Canadians do not need operational secrets. They need proof that the government understands the failure.
Public safety first, without losing fairness
The country does not need more slogans about “diversity” while businesses are threatened. It also does not need ethnic scapegoating that lets Ottawa dodge the systems failure.
The clean position is this: Canada should remain open to lawful immigrants, students and workers who respect the country. Canada should be closed to transnational criminals, gang enforcers and anyone who uses a visa as cover for extortion or violence.
If Carney’s Liberals cannot say that plainly, they have learned nothing.
- Facebook reel: Trish Libbrecht reel reacting to Bishnoi Gang reports
- Global News: Bishnoi extortion gang sent letter to Canadian police warning it had 1,000 gunmen
- Public Safety Canada: Currently listed terrorist entities
- Government of Canada: Government of Canada lists Bishnoi Gang as a terrorist entity
- FINTRAC: Operational alert: suspected laundering of proceeds linked to south-Asian-based organized crime
This article criticizes government screening and enforcement policy. It does not blame any ethnic, religious or immigrant community for the conduct of criminal networks.