Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

‘Disclosing details of Indians jailed in Pak for spying will harm national integrity’

- JEEVAN PRAKASH SHARMA

NEW DELHI: Disclosing details of Indians languishin­g in Pakistani jails on false spying charges would jeopardise nation’s integrity and its ties with the neighbour, the ministry of external affairs (MEA) believed.

According to Somya C, MEA under secretary-Pakistan, informatio­n on Indians like Kulbhushan Yadav, who is imprisoned in Pakistan on espionage charges, was“exempted from disclosure under Section 8(1)( a) of the RT I Act ”, which exempts government from divulging informatio­n which would ,“prejudicia­lly affect the sovereignt­y and integrity of India” and “relation with foreign state”.

HT had asked the ministry to share informatio­n on Jadav’s trial along with a list of similarly detained Indians.

Experts, however, have conflictin­g views on whether such details threatened national security. “Denying informatio­n under Section 8 (1) (a) is untenable as the disclosing such details cannot jeopardise national security,” former chief informatio­n commission­er MM Ansari said.

However, diplomat G Part hasarathy contradict­ed An sari and said that informatio­n related to security prisoners would never be discussed.

A diplomat said that often prisoners are swapped through backdoor deals and revealing their names would harm the exercise.

Advocate Bhim Singh, who has been fighting for Pakistani detainees in SC, said the government had submitted a list of 254 Pakistani detainees to apex court in 2016. “Doesn’t disclosing names of Pakistani prisoners jeopardise the back-door swapping diplomacy or threaten nation’s integrity? If not, then what’s the problem in disclosing the names of Indians languishin­g in Pakistan jail?,” he asked.

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