Kuwait Times

Indian on death row is ‘terrorist,’ Pakistan insists

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THE HAGUE: An Indian man on death row in Pakistan for alleged spying committed “terrorist acts” including targeted killings and kidnapping­s on New Delhi’s orders “to create anarchy”, Islamabad’s lawyers told UN’s top court yesterday. Islamabad’s lawyers opened their case on the second day of hearings at the Internatio­nal Court of Justice, where they are involved in a tense legal stand-off with bitter rival India in the case of Kulbhushan Sudhir Jadhav.

The hearings before The Hague-based ICJ coincide with a sharp spike in tensions between the two nuclear-armed neighbors after a suicide bombing in restive Kashmir last week and renewed fighting there on Monday. Jadhav, 48, was sentenced to death by a Pakistani military court in 2017, with New Delhi dragging Islamabad to the ICJ-set up in 1946 to rule in disputes between countries-over the case. A former navy commander, Jadhav was arrested in the restive southweste­rn province of Baluchista­n in 2016 and in 2017 the ICJ issued an urgent order telling Pakistan to stay his execution.

‘Creating anarchy’

Yesterday, Pakistan’s Attorney General Anwar Mansoor Khan told ICJ judges that Jadhav ran a network “to carry out despicable terrorism and suicide bombing, targeted killing, kidnapping for ransom and targeted operations to create unrest and instabilit­y in the country”. “His unlawful activities were directed at creating anarchy in Pakistan and particular­ly

targeted the China-Pakistan corridor,” Khan told a 15-judge bench. But Jadhav did not act on his own, Khan added. “Rather they were committed at the behest of the Indian state and the government.” A confession by Jadhav obtained by Pakistani officials “speaks of India’s state policy of sponsoring terrorism in Pakistan,” he said. Since independen­ce from Britain in 1947 “India has persistent­ly pursued the policy of trying to destroy Pakistan,” Khan said.

‘Political theatre’

India renewed its arguments Monday around the sensitive issue of Jadhav’s arrest and death sentence, insisting he was not a spy and that he was kidnapped in Pakistan. New Delhi on Monday told judges that Jadhav’s rights were violated during his trial and that India had no consular access to its citizen. New Delhi’s lawyers asked judges at the ICJ, also called the World Court, to order Pakistan to free Jadhav immediatel­y. But yesterday, another Pakistani lawyer Khawar Qureshi told the court: “India’s proceeding­s... are purely for political theatre... and they should be dismissed.” New Delhi’s move in the controvers­ial case comes as fresh bloodshed in Kashmir sent tensions between the nuclear-armed neighbors soaring. The rare foray into the internatio­nal courts by India and Pakistan could be another flashpoint after Thursday’s suicide bombing in Indian-administer­ed Kashmir that killed 41 troops.

Indian troops suffered new losses Monday in a fierce battle with Kashmir militants that left at least nine more dead, including four soldiers. The latest confrontat­ion piled more pressure on the Indian government to act, which has blamed Pakistan for the suicide attack that sparked widespread calls for action against its neighbor. Pakistan has rejected the allegation­s. Jadhav was accused of working for the Indian intelligen­ce services in the province bordering Afghanista­n, where Islamabad has long accused India of backing separatist rebels. — AFP

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