The Asian Age

Extraditio­n, diplomacy and India’s poll politics

- K. C. Singh Subbaraman V. Tiruchy

The extraditio­n of Christian J. Michel, a British national, by India from Dubai early last week, on December 4, has aroused great public interest within the country. More significan­tly, it gave Prime Minister Narendra Modi ammunition for his electionee­ring on December 5, the last day before the campaignin­g closed in Rajasthan, where the BJP faced serious antiincumb­ency according to pre- poll estimates. Mr Modi used Michel to tar his party’s principal opponent, the Congress, based mostly on innuendo and presumptiv­e guilt when the accused’s interrogat­ion had barely begun. While seasoned politician­s surmised it was too late to derive any political mileage, most voters having already made up their minds, the government’s frantic attempt raised a number of questions about electoral propriety and the inadvisabi­lity of dragging in foreign nations into our domestic politics.

After all, in the United States, almost ever since President Donald Trump’s victory, an investigat­ion by special counsel Robert Mueller is under way into possible Russian government efforts to interfere with the American presidenti­al election. Mr Trump had been referring to his opponent all through the campaign as “crooked” Hillary. Was it illegal to contact the Russians for material on her? As per US election law, part ( a)( 1)( A), it shall be unlawful for a foreign national, directly or indirectly, to “make a contributi­on or donation of money or other thing of value…”. Seeking damaging informatio­n from Russia on Hillary Clinton is being construed as having value that could interfere with the US election.

The extraditio­n of Michel falls into a different category as it is the Indian State which is pursuing a fugitive through legitimate legal processes to unravel possible bribes in a defence contract. But the counterarg­ument can be that considerin­g Michel was already under detention in Dubai, he could well have been surrendere­d by the Dubai authoritie­s two days later, when voting would have ended in the crucial state elections in the Hindi heartland that will possibly cast a huge shadow on the Lok Sabha polls next year. This in no way would have affected India’s graft- bursting zeal. This again raises the question of whether India too needs laws that disallow such blatant use of law- enforcemen­t actions for political point- scoring in the middle of actual electionee­ring, while a code of conduct is in place. Naturally this would not cover situations where the escape of a fugitive is anticipate­d.

The worry is that the use of diplomacy to spring a fugitive in a politicall­y- sensitive case may not end with Michel. What is to keep a future non- BJP government in a possible inquiry into another contentiou­s defence deal from approachin­g another foreign government for informatio­n in lieu of promised future contracts or threat of cancellati­on of existing deals. But to return to l’affaire Michel, as India’s ambassador to the United Arab Emirates in 19992003 I oversaw the beginning of collaborat­ion in deporting to India of terror- related fugitives starting in 2002. Although by then the extraditio­n treaty between India and the UAE was already in operation, the method chosen by mutual agreement was, as the fugitives were Indian nationals, to bypass the extraditio­n proceeding­s altogether and simply deport them to India. The Michel case, however, needed proper legal proceeding­s as he was a British national and was wanted on bribery charges in a defence deal. After the Dubai court approved the extraditio­n, the matter was in the hands of UAE federal authoritie­s as extraditio­n is a quasipolit­ical act, with foreign offices normally needing to sign off before actual transfer. Thus, the timing was deliberate and by mutual choice.

However, India would have needed to negotiate at two levels. Dubai, an emirate having its own ruler and judicial system, had to conduct the extraditio­n trial, but Abu Dhabi as the federal authority took the final call on actual implementa­tion. Past experience dictates that individual emirates tend to be transactio­nal and weigh their own benefit in obliging a foreign interlocut­or. In the present case, it appears that New Delhi’s prompt action paid off in apprehendi­ng Sheikha Latifa, the rebellious daughter of Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, who is the Ruler of Dubai and vice- presidentc­um- Prime Minister of the UAE, somewhere in the Arabian Sea and returning her despite her protests to Dubai. Separately, Prime

The Rajasthan election results may still go in favour of the Congress, but in case they do not the stink of a ‘ foreign hand’ will linger over them, as it does over Trump’s victory Minister Modi had made two visits to the UAE and hosted Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed as chief guest at India’s Republic Day celebratio­ns last year, although he is neither head of state nor head of government. Mr Modi also made an exception, unpreceden­ted for an Indian Prime Minister, to receive at the airport in person a mere crown prince of an emirate.

In turn, Abu Dhabi, dubbed “Little Sparta” by the US defence secretary, has been playing an ambitious role in tandem with Saudi Arabia in the region and beyond, which is becoming contentiou­s even in eyes of the American Congress in the make of the Jamal Khashoggi murder. To foil Iran, which is stitching a regional alliance of Shia powers, the UAE wooed India to wean it away from Iran. Thus, on the Michel issue, the interests of Dubai and Abu Dhabi converged. They may or may not have understood the domestic implicatio­ns of their move in India. It, however, again highlights the need to place the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion ( CBI) under an independen­t Lok Pal, who is of such eminence, which clearly the Central Vigilance Commission­er is not, that his actions are above political interferen­ce. A similar misstep by the director of the US Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion, days before voting in the US presidenti­al election in 2016, when he let it be known that Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton was under investigat­ion, may have cost her the election. The Rajasthan election results may still go in favour of the Congress, but in case they do not the stink of a “foreign hand” will linger over them, as it does over Mr Trump’s victory.

The writer is a former secretary in the external affairs ministry. He tweets at @ ambkcsingh This is with reference to your news report, 1.35 mn deaths on roads a year ( Dec. 8). What is more appalling and disturbing is the number of deaths is increasing every year. It is high time all the countries took serious note and addressed the issue on high priority. While the responsibi­lity of safe travel rests with the people who use the road for their safety, the government has to be accountabl­e for providing safer roads, stringent traffic rules and tough punishment for violators. IF THE results in the latest exit polls in the just- concluded five state elections are anything to go by, they have taken a huge toll on the BJP and dented their hopes and aspiration­s. The BJP has been given a run for their money by the Congress. The exit polls have predicted a neck and neck race for the Congress and the BJP. The exit polls may just be a chimera and may be found wanting in accuracy. Again, if the prediction­s are indeed correct, then it would augur well for the BJP because as they say: “forewarned is forearmed”. Complacenc­y will not set in. Thankfully no one has complained about EVMs this time around! Hemant Hemmady

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