Canada goes to polls; 45 Indo-Canadians in fray Sunday, January 22 2006 11:23 Hrs (IST) - World Time -
Toronto:
As Canada goes to the polls tomorrow,(Jan 22, 2006) nearly 45 Indian origin candidates would test their fate after a quite but aggressive campaign to woo the immigrant community with speeches in their native Hindi and Punjabi besides promises to take up issues close to their heart.
Most of the Indo-Canadians running for the elections are from the Conservative Party (13), followed by the ruling Liberal Party (11) and the New Democratic Party (8).
Canada's Health Minister Ujjal Dosanjh, Ruby Dhalla, youngest Member of Parliament, Herb Dhaliwal, Gurbax Malhi, Navdeep Bains, Jagtar Shergil, Bal Gosal, Jaipal Massey-Singh are among the 45 candidates of Indian origin who for the pastsix weeks have been campaigning for votes through personal contacts and other means of communications.
Despite heavy snowfall and temperatures at times dipping to minus 20 degree Celsius, the candidates were knocking doors, listening to complaints, and asking people to
vote for them.
Unlike Indian elections, there were no big rallies or posters on walls the campaign was quite with candidates addressing voters in small gatherings organized at shopping
malls, places of worships, schools and community centres.
For conservative party candidate Gosal campaigning was mainly a family affair with his wife, son and two daughters going around constituencies in a small truck and listening to
complaints.
Gosal said he has campaigned in three languages, Punjabi for his large Sikh constituents, Hindi for other Indians and English for the rest. The same holds true for rest
of the candidates.
Liberal party candidate Dhalla said "This is a great country. You can come here, get a job and can run for Parliament. Dhalla promised she would take up with the federal government the need to recognise foreign credentials.
The major goal for the Indian origin community here is recognition of their foreign credentials. Many of them are not accepted in their professions because the process of education upgrades is not only expensive, but complex and takes years.
As a result foreign trained professionals in Canada are driving taxis, selling pizzas, working as security guards or doing labour jobs.
Over 1600 candidates are in the fray for the total 308 seats. The election was necessitated after the Liberal Party's minority Government lost a no-confidence motion in December.
The Liberal party is seeking votes to maintain Canada's identity as a soverign state but the main opposition Conservative party is asking voters to vote for change in the wake of corruption charges against the ruling party.