City
Epaper

SC asks Centre to decide on extradition of IS woman member, daughter from Afghanistan

By IANS | Published: January 03, 2022 4:33 PM

New Delhi, Jan 3 The Supreme Court on Monday asked the Centre to consider the request of a ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Jan 3 The Supreme Court on Monday asked the Centre to consider the request of a man from Kerala seeking extradition of his daughter, who left India in 2016 to join terrorist organisation IS, and her daughter from Afghanistan.

A bench of Justices L. Nageswara Rao and B. R. Gavai, disposing of the petition, directed the Centre to take a decision on the extradition request within a period of eight weeks

The top court direction came on a petition filed by Kerala-based V.J. Sebastian seeking the extradition of his daughter Sonia Sebastian (name changed to Aysha after converting to Islam) and her minor daughter, who were reportedly jailed before the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan.

The top court also granted liberty to the petitioner to move the high court concerned, if he is aggrieved with the Centre's decision.

Advocate Renjith Marar, representing the petitioner, submitted before the top court that his client's plea was filed in July 2021, before Taliban took over Afghanistan. He added that though the prisons were demolished after the Taliban took control, however it cannot be said that his client's daughter and granddaughter are not in detention, as there are reports of prisoners being detained at border areas.

Marar, however, noted that there is some difficulty in connection with repatriation, as the extradition agreement was with the erstwhile government.

Citing newspaper reports, the bench noted that the relations between the governments seems to be good. "But you have to first persuade the Indian government," it told the petitioner's counsel.

The top court said it can ask the government to consider petitioner's request, as in extradition matters, the court cannot pass order. "All these are matters for the government to decidea..", it observed.

Marar sought liberty to move the top court again, if the petitioner is aggrieved by the Centre's decision. However, the bench said if the petitioner is aggrieved with Centre's decision, then he can move the high court.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: New DelhiindiaThe Supreme CourtTalibanSonia sebastian
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalJaishankar Rejects US President Biden’s Remarks, Says, “India Not Xenophobic, but Very Open and Welcoming”

NationalFSSAI Increases Pesticide Residue Limit Tenfold in Herbs and Spices

NationalNew Delhi: 18-Year-Old Stabbed to Death by Two Individuals Over Romantic Rivalry

TechnologyWhatsApp Banned?: A Step-by-Step Guide To Unblock Your Number And Account

TechnologyWhatsApp Cracks Down in India: Over 7 Crore Accounts Banned in 2023

National Realted Stories

NationalRahul Gandhi uttered lies, misled people on guarantees, says KCR

NationalDelhi man stabbed multiple times by unidentified assailants, dies

NationalBJP releases manifesto for Odisha Assembly polls

NationalSibling deaths: Accused father still on run, police teams on trail

NationalThis election being fought to protect Constitution, reservations: Rahul Gandhi