The infiltration starts in our gurdwaras, in our places of worship, in our community organizations, and it influences and impacts Punjabi-based media and also politicians from Punjabi Sikh backgrounds who are actually entering any level of government as well. The way India does that is through its consulate offices, the coercion and visa denials. You have the same individuals who are acting as Indian proxies. If somebody's visa is denied, for example, they are told to come into the Indian consulate. They go to the Indian consulate through a middle person, who is more than likely the individual who has provided enough intelligence to get that person's visa cancelled in the first place, and then, when they are reissued a visa, they are made to bend the knee.
Balpreet Singh spoke about signing certain types of letters, denouncing Sikh separatism or the Khalistan movement, or on the flip side, promoting Mr. Modi and basically his fascist regime in India. These are individuals who are usually within community leadership spaces and roles, so I think those are the individuals they target more than anyone. The infiltration runs deep through media, ethnic media, through gurdwaras and places of worship, Sikh organizations, all the way through to politicians in any level of government who are trying to make a difference. I think India moves to counter and influence—