India-US row over diplomat's arrest threatens ties


By Arun Kumar

Washington, Dec 14 (IANS): A brewing India-US diplomatic row over the arrest of a senior Indian diplomat in New York for alleged visa fraud threatens to frost strategic partnership considered crucial for America's Asia pivot.

While an angry India has asked the US to quickly resolve the matter of the "absolutely unacceptable" treatment of Devyani Khobragade, its deputy consul general in New York, Washington hopes the issue would not affect their long standing partnership.

India's chargé d'affaires in Washington, Taranjit Singh Sandhu ,Friday raised the issue with the State Department to reiterate Indian Foreign Secretary Sujatha Singh's "strong demarche" to the US ambassador in New Delhi, Nancy Powell, on the issue.

Khobragade, 39, was arrested, handcuffed and charged Thursday with one count of visa fraud and one count of making false statements, which carry a total maximum sentence 15 years in prison.

She was later released on a $250,000 bond after pleading not guilty in a Manhattan court. She is due back in court in January.

Sandhu, an embassy statement said, emphasised that Khobragade "is a diplomat, who is in the US in pursuance of her duties and hence is entitled to the courtesy due to a diplomat in the country of her work."

But US officials are believed to have taken the position that under the Vienna Convention on consular relations, consular officials enjoy immunity from the jurisdiction of US courts only with respect to acts performed in the exercise of consular functions.

New York-based Indian-American attorney Anand Ahuja agrees that that unlike diplomats accredited to the federal government, consular officers are not accorded absolute immunity from a host country's criminal jurisdiction.

They may be tried for certain local laws by a local court, and are immune from local jurisdiction only in cases directly relating to consular functions, he told local media.

Another New York attorney Ravi Batra, who has handled such cases before, suggested creation of a new legal category for diplomatic foreign domestic workers exempting them from US labour laws, including, wages and hours.

Until then "American laws must be followed to avoid both criminal and civil liability as well as diaspora and foreign-sovereign embarrassment," he said.

Diplomatic corps of foreign nations who pay their workers below US-mandated hours and wage standards "remain at high risk to be in the crosshairs of illegality and reputation-suicide," Batra said.

US media on its part has focused on the issue of exploitation of the housekeeper with the New York Daily News saying "Women's advocate, Indian diplomat paid housekeeper peanuts" and the New York Post screaming "Women's rights lobbyist 'pays nanny $3 a hour'".

Both dug up an April speech by Khobragade where she "provided a unique perspective on gender and social equality in India" and "spoke passionately about women's rights."

Ironically the embarrassing incident took place just a day after Sujatha Singh returned home after an "exceedingly useful and very productive" visit during which Washington signalled its desire to intensify the India-US partnership regardless of the upcoming 2014 parliamentary elections in India.

Singh had held talks with top Obama administration officials across the board starting with Secretary of State John Kerry to White House Deputy National Security to Advisor Tony Blinken to senior officials in the Defence and energy department.

  

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Comment on this article

  • Anil Dharmesh, mangalore

    Sun, Dec 15 2013

    One should abide the law of the land. US is not a UP or any other Indian states. Do you know how Indians treat their fellow Indians in terms of wages in US....? In US minimum salary is $7.25/hour as per labor law and it goes on If anyone pays less than this minimum is a crime & is against the law. laws are very strict. I guess the above lady consular had still had her Indian mentality about the payment, Now she tasted the effect of her crime If nannies work 15 hours a day, they should receive salary accordingly. But many Indians won't follow these rules.

    because they bring girls( labours) from India illegally through visiting visa by luring them big money and put them in their inside the house between four walls. If by their fate, US officials know then they face harsh punishment with huge comprehensions but many Indians particularly Indian & Pak Restaurant owners are very clever made them slavery work whole day and night. As per the law its illegal and also one who was in visiting visa not supposed to work. Here she has done all these crimes. Secondly please note that for any crimes whether it is petty or a murder, police will come and handcuff the person. They don't see gender or your status. All are same as per the law . This rule applies whoever lives in US including citizens

    DisAgree Agree Reply Report Abuse

  • Bulsam, Mangalore

    Sun, Dec 15 2013

    The helpless world have become the slave of the super power and they could do nothing about it.
    The super power is like James Bond, got license to kill, invade, spy, bomb, pollute the environment, stock pile nuclear weapons, arm-twist and unethically manipulate other nations still they are clean.
    , they are respected, they were honoured and they are feared.
    It is a very dangerous trend and the world should correct it.

    DisAgree Agree [1] Reply Report Abuse

  • sarvesh, lucknow

    Sat, Dec 14 2013

    India should recall immediately her
    all consulates from US and kick out all US consulates from India. Until USA apologies to her and India.

    DisAgree [15] Agree [7] Reply Report Abuse


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