Hindustan Times (Patiala)

INDIAN HIGH COMMISSION ON JOHNSON’S LIST OF ‘DEFAULTERS’

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

LONDON: Britain’s new foreign secretary Boris Johnson has informed the House of Commons that more than £95 million are owed by foreign missions, including nearly £4.5 million by the Indian high commission, who refuse to pay London’s congestion charge.

Johnson released the list in a written reply last week that includes parking fines owed by foreign missions and details of 11 serious offences committed by diplomats of nine missions who have avoided prosecutio­n due to diplomatic immunity.

Every vehicle entering a zone in central London marked by the letter “C” needs to pay £11.50 per day at certain times as congestion charge. Failure to pay invites a penalty of £130. The US with £10.6 million tops the list of nearly 70 London-based missions who do not pay the charge. India is fifth. The charge was introduced in 2003 to raise funds for London’s transport infrastruc­ture.

Described by Transport for London (TfL) officials as the ‘stubborn minority’, the missions refuse to pay the charge for their vehicles on the ground that it is a ‘tax’ and as such they are exempted from paying it under the Vienna Convention.

A spokespers­on of the Indian high commission told Hindustan Times: “We believe that the congestion charge imposed by the UK authoritie­s was not a service charge but a tax, which should be exempted under the Vienna Convention and therefore the Indian high commission, like several diplomatic missions in London, do not pay the congestion charge.”

THE UNITED STATES WITH £10.6 MILLION TOPS THE LIST OF NEARLY 70 LONDONBASE­D MISSIONS WHO DO NOT PAY LONDON’S CONGESTION CHARGE, WHILE INDIA IS FIFTH

 ??  ?? Boris Johnson
Boris Johnson

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