The Free Press Journal

Jadhav case: Pak AG to lead team to ICJ meet on June 8

- SAJJAD HUSSAIN

Pakistan's Attorney-General Ashtar Ausaf Ali will lead a team to the Internatio­nal Court of Justice at The Hague on June 8 for a meeting of "agents" from India and Pakistan with the court's president to discuss the future proceeding­s in the Kulbhushan Jadhav case.

The decision to send the attorney general was taken at a meeting of the Parliament­ary Committee on National Security on Tuesday to discuss Pakistan's strategy in the case, Dawn reported.

National Assembly Speaker Ayaz Sadiq chaired the meeting.

During the meeting of "agents", the dates for subsequent hearings and submission of documents related to the case India has brought against Pakistan over the death sentence given to Indian national Jadhav following a "secret" trial will be discussed, the report said.

Pakistan is also likely to indicate its intention to nominate an ad-hoc judge for the case.

The ICJ statutes provide for a state party to a case, which does not have a judge of its nationalit­y on the bench, to choose a person to sit as an ad-hoc judge in that case. The parliament­ary committee took up the issue after India was granted provisiona­l measures by the ICJ on May 18 — restrainin­g Pakistan from executing Jadhav, 46, who had been convicted of espionage and sentenced to death by a Pakistan military court.

India approached the ICJ citing that it had been repeatedly denied consular access to Jadhav in violation of the provisions of the Vienna Convention.

The attorney-general also briefed the participan­ts of the meeting about the Pakistan government's strategy for the case.

The committee members were reportedly not satisfied by the explanatio­ns given by the government's legal team about the case at the last meeting.

The National Assembly speaker told the media that he was satisfied with the briefing by the attorney general on Tuesday. Senator Sherry Rehman of the Pakistan Peoples Party, however, disputed Speaker Sadiq, saying that everything that was shared with the parliament­ary committee members were 'open source' informatio­n and the replies were unsatisfac­tory. –PTI

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