The National - News

INDIA’S RELIEF AT COURT RULING

UN court’s order to Pakistan ‘a great relief’ for Jadhav

- Samanth Subramania­n Foreign Correspond­ent ssubramani­an@thenationa­l.ae

Pakistan told not to execute former Indian navy officer for spying,

The United Nations’ highest court yesterday prevented Pakistan from executing a former Indian naval officer, pending a final decision from the 11-judge bench later this year.

Kulbhushan Jadhav, 47, was arrested in March 2016 in the Balochista­n province of Pakistan. In April this year, a Pakistani military court found him guilty of spying and sentenced him to death.

India has said that Jadhav had long retired from the navy, and that he was kidnapped from Iran while there on personal business.

On May 8, the Indian government approached the Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague, the Netherland­s, arguing that Pakistan had denied India consular access to Jadhav 16 times and that his trial and sentencing breached the Vienna convention on diplomatic relations.

In its interim order yesterday, the UN court agreed that Pakistan had breached the convention.

“Pakistan shall take all measures at its disposal to ensure that Mr Jadhav is not executed pending the final decision in these proceeding­s,” the court said.

Reacting to the order, India’s foreign minister, Sushma Swaraj, said it “has come as a great relief to the family of Kulbhushan Jadhav and the people of India”.

The verdict represents a diplomatic setback for Pakistan, which has insisted that Jadhav’s espionage activities put him beyond the purview of the ICJ’s jurisdicti­on, and that the court cannot interfere in matters of national security.

Pakistan’s counsel at the court maintained that, according to a 2008 agreement between Islamabad and New Delhi, the two countries could grant or deny consular access unilateral­ly in cases that involved “political or security” threats.

“India desperatel­y tried to divert the world’s attention by presenting Kulbhushan Jadhav’s case from [a] humanitari­an angle,” Nafees Zakaria, a spokesman for Pakistan’s foreign ministry, said yesterday.

No date has yet been set for Jadhav’s execution, although Pakistan told the ICJ during the tri- al that it was unlikely to happen before August 2017.

The interim order issued yesterday is nominally binding, but there have been cases in the past when countries have disregarde­d such stays of execution.

US states, on two separate occasions, executed convicts on schedule even after the UN court instructed them to be held back from the executione­r, drawing world condemnati­on.

In 1998,Virginia executed a Paraguayan national who had been convicted of attempted rape and murder, and the following year, a German national convicted of murder was gassed by Arizona.

For Pakistan to follow suit and execute Jadhav despite the court’s order would “draw internatio­nal censure”, said ICJ president Ronny Abraham.

 ?? Punit Paranipe / AFP ?? Friends of Kulbhushan Jadhav in a Mumbai neighbourh­ood react after the UN’s highest court yesterday prevented Pakistan from sending the former Indian navy officer to the gallows. A Pakistani military court has found Jadhav guilty of espionage.
Punit Paranipe / AFP Friends of Kulbhushan Jadhav in a Mumbai neighbourh­ood react after the UN’s highest court yesterday prevented Pakistan from sending the former Indian navy officer to the gallows. A Pakistani military court has found Jadhav guilty of espionage.

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