Death threats are pretty routine for British Sikh journalist Jasveer Singh. When he posts stories on social media about his community, they’re often met with abuse. He’s been called a terrorist, as have the subjects of his stories. His accounts have been reported en masse for allegedly posting offensive comments, prompting the platforms to suspend them. “It does descend into direct threats,” Singh said. “‘We’re coming for you next… We’re going to shut you up.’ That’s a daily occurrence.”

Why did we write this story?

Technology and a global authoritarian shift are making transnational repression easier than ever. The U.K., weakened by Brexit and political chaos, is uniquely vulnerable. Sikh groups are the latest to accuse the government of allowing human rights violations on British soil.

It’s never entirely clear who is behind the campaigns, or if they’re actively being coordinated. But the abuse tends to flare up during moments of political scandal in India. The country’s deepening ethnic and religious divisions under the Hindu nationalist government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi are plain to see in the digital realm. Trolling of minorities by supporters of Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party is commonplace. India has used diplomatic channels to brand diaspora groups as terrorists, and has used digital channels to harass and disrupt potential opponents. Singh and other prominent Sikhs in the U.K. have received messages from X — the platform formerly known as Twitter — telling them that Indian authorities have demanded their accounts be blocked.

I think most people have got fairly thick-skinned about these threats,” said Dabinderjit Singh, a prominent British Sikh activist and advisor to the Sikh Federation U.K., a lobby group. But then the killings began, and the threats got harder to ignore. In Pakistan, two prominent Sikh separatists were gunned down, one in January, the second in May. A third, Hardeep Singh Nijjar, was killed in June in Vancouver, Canada, in what the Canadian government alleges was a state-sponsored assassination. A fourth plot was allegedly foiled by the FBI in the U.S. “Perhaps the situation is somewhat different now that those threats appear to be potentially real,” Dabinderjit Singh said.