for spiders only OneWorld South Asia Home > In depth > Human Rights skip to main content
OneWorld.net_home_link Logo_ Go to OneWorld.net homepage
Search for
NEWS IN DEPTH PARTNERS GET INVOLVED OUR NETWORK
16 May 2008

About Us    Contact Us   

India, Pakistan to free 1,100 prisoners

New Delhi: After the hue and cry by relatives of prisoner Sarabjit Singh, an Indian facing death penalty in Pakistan, the governments of India and Pakistan have taken a decision to release all fishermen and civilian prisoners. There are more than 400 Indians and 700 Pakistanis in prisons in Pakistan and India respectively.

India and Pakistan today took a significant step forward in addressing the humanitarian issue of prisoners by agreeing to release all fishermen and civilian prisoners on September 12. The Home Secretaries of the two neighbours also decided to meet again to sign an MoU on drug trafficking, but failed to reach an agreement on an Extradition Treaty.

They also decided to provide immediate notification of arrests made, give consular access to all persons within three months of arrest and release prisoners immediately after completion of sentence and nationality verification. They agreed to implement the decisions arrived at by the Foreign Secretaries in December 2004 on prisoners.

India reiterated its suggestion of signing an Extradition Treaty with Pakistan, an issue which has failed to gather since 2001 when the then Union Home Minister L K Advani had first raised the issue with Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf when he visited India. The Pakistani side did not have much to say on this except for telling the Indians that they would discuss the matter in-house and then revert back to New Delhi. Diplomatic circles here are well aware of Pakistan’s problems in signing an extradition treaty with India.

The second round of Home Secretary- level talks between India and Pakistan on Terrorism and Drug Trafficking, which concluded here today, took three important decisions as follows:

The two countries to release on September 12, 2005 all fishermen and civilian prisoners who have completed their sentence and whose national status has been confirmed.

Experts from India’s Central Bureau of Investigation and Pakistan’s Federal Investigation Agency to meet at mutually convenient dates in the near future to work out modalities for the implementation of the arrangement for cooperation between the two agencies agreed earlier.

Narcotics control agencies of the two countries to continue cooperation and exchange of information and agreed that the Memorandum of Understanding between them will be finalised and signed shortly. The MOU aims at having a regular institutional mechanism in place to intensify mutual cooperation and liaison on drug control matters.

A Joint Press Statement, issued at the end of the two-day talks, said both sides reiterated their commitment to combat terrorism and re-emphasised the need for effective steps for the complete elimination of this menace. The Indian and the Pakistani delegations were led by Mr V K Duggal and Syed Kamal Shah respectively.

The Tribune

User comments

There are no comments



 
OneWorld thematic channels and collaborative projects include:
AIDS channel digital opportunity channel open knowledge network support centre tiki the Penguin, Kids Channel