City
Epaper

SC dismisses plea filed by family of Indian national detained in Prague for plotting Pannun's murder

By IANS | Updated: January 4, 2024 12:35 IST

New Delhi, Jan 4 The Supreme Court on Thursday dismissed the habeas corpus plea filed by a family ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Jan 4 The Supreme Court on Thursday dismissed the habeas corpus plea filed by a family member of Nikhil Gupta, the Indian national accused by US federal prosecutors of plotting to assassinate Khalistani leader Gurpatwant Singh Pannun.

A bench of Justices Sanjiv Khanna and Dipankar Datta remarked that the issue is “sensitive” in nature and the Union government should decide the extent of its intervention.

The bench said that it cannot go into merits of the case or pass any directions relating to grant of consular access and legal aid in the matter considering the public international law and comity of courts.

The apex court took note of the fact that Gupta -- who was detained at Prague Airport on June 30 last year -- has already been granted consular access in terms of the Vienna Convention and certain directions were earlier passed by the Delhi High Court as well.

Earlier in December 2023, the Supreme Court had asked the kin of Gupta to first approach the court in Czech Republic where he is presently detained.

Adjourning the hearing to January 4, it had said, “If there is violation of any law, you have to go to court over there.”

An indictment was brought in US District Court against Gupta of "planning and directing" a plot from India to allegedly kill Sikh separatist leader Pannun -- a dual citizen of the US and Canada -- in New York.

The petition filed before the Supreme Court of India claimed that the influence of the US on the Czech authorities poses a reasonable apprehension about Gupta’s safety in Czech prison.

It further alleged that Gupta was denied consular access, the right to contact his family in India, and the freedom to seek legal representation.

It demanded appointment of legal counsel in both countries -- Czech Republic and the US, specifically an Indian advocate to represent him during the extradition trial in Prague.

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

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalMiddle East conflict challenges Asia-Pacific resilience: ADB

TechnologyGold, silver decline nearly 1 pc as profit booking offsets demand

Other SportsGavaskar lauds 'fearless prodigies' Mukul & Badoni's 'unbelievable innings' in LSG win

BusinessJefferies stays marginally overweight on India; valuations improve despite weak Q1

BusinessMinistry of Petroleum & Natural Gas extends bulk LPG allocation to key industrial sectors

National Realted Stories

NationalBengal PDS scam: ED conducting simultaneous raids at 12 locations

National"Owaisi and others adopt such tactics to help BJP": Sanjay Raut after AIMIM exits alliance ahead of Bengal polls

NationalSexual harassment at Nashik tech firm, company’s HR official arrested for inaction

NationalHimachal HC orders release of pension to former MLAs, sets one-month deadline with 6% interest clause

NationalDigital First: Over 5.72 lakh households embrace self-enumeration as Census 2027 gains momentum