Canco Petroleum and the KTF – update
The Khalistani are hiring for the latest Canco outlet in Innisfil, Ontario. A gas station attendant position pays $16.55 to $17.00 per hour. With benefits like on-site parking and a store discount, there’s bound to be a new gas chain born some day. Parmjeet Singh Sehgal and Ravinder Nijjar were working as gas jockeys in 2010 when they bought a c-gas site in Kamloops. Canco Petroleum launched in 2016 with a single location. (https://cancopetroleum.ca)
Canco Petroleum is owned by Parmjeet Singh Sehgal, Ravinder Singh Nijjar, and Jatinder Singh Nijjar. The Nijjars are brothers to slain KTF (Khalistan Tiger Force) leader Hardeep Singh Nijjar.
 

Parmjeet Singh Sehgal and Ravinder Nijjar
Canco Petroleum exploded in 2020 after moving its head office to Kelowna. By 2023 there were 100 Canco branded sites in Canada. Canco Petroleum now owns and operates some 160 gas station, convenience store, liquor, and quick service restaurant locations. Most are owned. Some say their expansion is fueled by laundering vast sums of drug money from the Sinaloa Cartel.

Funding was no problem for Canco and independents sold at inflated prices. In the span of 7 years, Canco’s growth pushed it into Ontario.
Canco has deals with Chester’s Chicken and Tim Hortons.

Chester’s is a quick-serve restaurant (QSR) concept with 1,200 locations, virtually all in the U.S.
Tim Hortons is owned by Restaurant Brands International Inc., one of the world’s largest QSR companies. RBI boasts $40b in annual sales from 30,000 outlets in 100 countries.
KTF financier Bir Singh Sandher’s lawyer Robert Tonsoo of Benson Law LLP is closely connected to Canco Petroleum and has been from its inception.

“We are an Administrative Concierge for Entrepreneurs. Your trusted executive …”
Navjit Khun Khun is a member of Khalsa Aid International. After articling at Benson Law, she took her oath from Tonsoo at the Guru Amar Dass Durbar Gurdwara in Rutland.
Hardeep Singh Nijjar

Jatinder Singh Nijjar

Ravinder Singh Nijjar
navjot@cancopetroleum.ca, satvir@cancopetroleum.ca

parmjeet@cancopetroleum.ca
Recently a young Punjabi student, still wearing her Walmart uniform, was seen buying dozens of prepaid Visa and Mastercard cards in a Kelowna Canco. With stacks of $100 and $50 bills she bought thousands worth of cards, no questions asked. The cards will then take two forks in the road: buying crypto from a machine, and depositing it in a crypto wallet, or they go to a storefront Forex and used to make a Hawala transfer. The dirty money is now clean.