Pannun has campaigned for a separate Sikh state called
Khalistan, organizing events and rallies around the world, including the
United States,
Canada, and the
United Kingdom. He has said that the
Modi government wants him dead and that Indian politicians have threatened him and other Sikh separatists in parliament.
The Washington Post has described some of these potential threats as credible. According to the
BBC, Pannun has released hundreds of videos censuring India and offering monetary rewards to people who write anti-India graffiti or hoist Khalistan flags on government buildings, or desecrate the Indian flag. In September 2023, he was recorded calling for the "political death" of Prime Minister Modi and two of his ministers. Pannun has also claimed responsibility for posters which read "kill India" along with the names and pictures of Indian diplomats. He has denied that the posters incite violence against the diplomats. In September 2023, a video surfaced in which Pannun warned
Indo-Canadian Hindus to leave Canada, further accusing them of having "repudiated their allegiance to Canada". The video elicited condemnation from several Canadian politicians, including Federal party leaders,
Pierre Poilievre and
Jagmeet Singh. Canada's
Public Safety Minister,
Dominic LeBlanc, described the video as "offensive and hateful". In November 2023, Pannun warned of danger to individuals planning to travel by
Air India on 19 November (the date of the
2023 Cricket World Cup finals). Shortly after, Canada's Transport Minister, Pablo Rodriguez and the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) announced an investigation into the incident. Spokesperson Kristin Kelly stated that the RCMP was collaborating with domestic and international partners and "industry stakeholders" in an investigation into "the threat against Air India flights." Pannun stated that his message was about boycotting, not bombing Air India. ==Assassination attempt==