Deccan Chronicle

Pak to hang former Indian naval officer

Military court sentences Kulbhushan Jadhav to death

- DC CORRESPOND­ENTS

Pakistan’s powerful military establishm­ent announced on Monday that former Indian naval officer Kulbhushan Jadhav would be hanged after a “military court” found him guilty of “espionage and sabotage”, in a move that quickly raised tension between the nuclear-armed neighbours.

India slammed the decision and said in a demarche to Pakistan’s high commission­er Abdul Basit that Mr Jadhav was “kidnapped last year from Iran”, and his trial was “farcical” in the absence of any evidence against him. Foreign secretary S. Jaishankar summoned Mr Basit and handed over the demarche.

Pakistani military courts have a notorious reputation for being kangaroo courts. It remains to be seen if India seeks global interventi­on through the UN or the United States to stop the hanging.

India also pointed out that consular access had been repeatedly denied by Pakistan despite 13 requests in the past one year, and that New Delhi was not even made aware that he was being brought to trial.

Pakistan has termed Mr Jadhav an agent of RAW, and has claimed that he is still a serving naval officer. However, India has said he was a former naval officer.

Pakistan’s powerful military establishm­ent announced on Monday that former Indian naval officer Kulbhushan Jadhav would be hanged after a “military court” found him guilty of “espionage and sabotage”.

The Pakistan military’s mouthpiece, the InterServi­ces Public Relations (ISPR), said the death sentence had been confirmed by Pakistan Army Chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa. A security official said that the court-martial had been kept secret even within the ranks of the military.

Pakistan has termed Mr Jadhav an agent of India’s external spy agency (Research and Analysis Wing) RAW, and has claimed that he is still a serving naval officer, while India has said he was a former naval officer.

Indian government sources had said last year that Mr Jadhav became a businessma­n, and stayed in Iran after retiring from the Navy.

India said he was abducted from Iran on the orders of Pakistani intelligen­ce agencies.

In a statement from Rawalpindi, the ISPR said, “Indian RAW agent/naval officer commander Kulbushan Sudhir Jadhav alias Hussein Mubarak Patel was arrested on March 3, 2016 through a counterint­elligence operation from Mashkel, Balochista­n, for his involvemen­t in espionage and sabotage activities against Pakistan.”

“The spy has been tried through the field general court martial under the Pakistan Army Act (PAA), 1952, and awarded the death sentence. Jadhav was tried under Section 59 of the PAA and Section 3 of the Official Secrets Act of 1923,” the ISPR said.

“He confessed before a magistrate and the court that he was tasked by the RAW to plan, coordinate and organise espionage/sabotage activities aiming to destabilis­e and wage war against Pakistan by impeding the efforts of law enforcemen­t agencies for restoring peace,” it said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India