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ICJ hearing on Kulbhushan Jadhav case : News, Updates & Discussions

Exactly the court relies on laws and proceedings ,does ICJ accepts the proceedings of your military court ?
Has that court proven without doubt that he is involved in spying activities responsible for killings in pakistan justifying death penalty ?
Can a person without consullar access without a defence be pronounced guilty ?

Still and again, your insisting for secondary procedure or once the petition is being admitted as credible. KY was tried under which Court or Law or in which jurisdiction and all those Indian Charges/Claims are secondary at the moment while the matter is proceeding in ICJ. The first point is, whether India succeeded to establish that ICJ can treat and interfere in this type of matter and has the legal jurisdiction/authority to grant interim stay and dismiss the order of Pakistan's Court.

As I said and will repeat again, Does India acknowledge and accepts ICJ? and also, the first thing before proceeding further w.r.t. whatever your claims are, it is to decide that whether ICJ has jurisdiction in this matter or not. If the matter does not fall within jurisdiction of ICJ and do not comes in its cognizance, how come ICJ can proceed with the matter or Indian claims/charges can be established and be entertained. I will repeat and try to understand the basic need and norms of proceedings as a Court can only proceed with a matter/can entertain any complaint which falls under its jurisdiction only as defined by the Law.

There are two basic points, IMO, as legal objections against the Indian Petition that does India abide by ICJ itself and a commonwealth country can be called by ICJ especially for these types of matters? and Does ICJ has jurisdiction to proceed such matters?. As and when if these or such types of legal objections are rejected by ICJ then the matter will proceed whereby India will claim whatever it is and Pakistan will try its best to prove the trial of KY as perfect as well as per law.

1. KJ, his arrest from day 1 is shrouded in mystery, let alone India, even citizens of Pakistan properly don't know the case around it, all they know so far is propaganda pushed down there throats.

Let me allow to give some hints if you really are serious to understand the matter. KY was under Radar for almost two years and his capture was actually one of the best successful counter intelligence feed. If Indian 24/7 propaganda is what people like, as you are pretending to be the choice of people then whatever you state about Pakistan, is nowhere even close to what the one Arnab does so. Alas the internet world. KY is not responsible for a single act as you referred to Kassab, but this guy was running a hell of op inside Pakistan from Baluchistan to Karachi mostly which includes majorly terrorism, Baluchistan Insurgency, support for ethnic and sectarian violence etc. He is not some kind of ordinary asset but in-charge of all these crimes in Pakistan.
 
In my opinion indians should ask RAW if Yadev is guilty or not, considering RAW won't lie to its government and countrymen. Screaming on Pakistani forum asking Pakistanis to prove Yadev's crimes is ridiculous (We have thousands of terrorist attacks and thousands of terrorists at our disposal, no one can refute that). Ask RAW if "We have your monkey" really means what it means.
Yadev's sentence would not be carried out. He will be used as a bargaining chip in my opinion.
 
this is what left for the whole world to see India openly supporting and admitting they support terrorist activities in Pakistan by support indian terrorists like kulboshan

what a shame for a civilized world
 
this is what left for the whole world to see India openly supporting and admitting they support terrorist activities in Pakistan by support indian terrorists like kulboshan

what a shame for a civilized world

yes, Osama bin Laden also was found in India. agreed with you man.

truth will come and this is a gud steps taken by India.
 
Kby will not be executed till the case is going. As per your narrative You went there to reject a case.

Why would you reject it, you have no evidence that he was a spy. You tried to show the confession clip, which is not permissible, this itself shows he is innocent as per jurisdiction.

you lost the plot.

We can hang KBY whenever we want to. Even though he would be given some time to appeal in higher courts against his sentence.

As for the clip. We never tried to show any clip. Your media lied to you about it.

The plot is in our hand completely. Don't rely on what they tell you in India and search for yourself about the truth.
 
KY is going home .. Alive

We intend to send him in a bodybag actually. :butcher:

India does not have to provide any evidence, its Pakistan who has to provide evidence. They have shown nothing but a doctored tape of confession.

India can't even answer a simple question why terrorist commandant Jhadav was issued two passports under different names and you expect us to provide evidence? :rofl:

...and
2. fake passports,
3. entry illegally
4. testimony of 100s of terrorists,
5. and arrest leading from those terrorists
6. with supporting videos from PM modi and MoD clearly stating that we are doing terrorism in Pakistan and are supporting Baluchistan movement.

he would be convicted any i jury anywhere in the world the fake passport is enough proof for me confirmed by iran
what else do you need, want baghwan to come and testify?

Add Ehsanullah Ahsan to the list. He will testify against RAW.
 
yes, Osama bin Laden also was found in India. agreed with you man.

truth will come and this is a gud steps taken by India.
Osama or no Osama, ICJ ruling this way or that way, the terrorist Indian Naval Commander will meet the gallows in any case. A terrorist must be served justice. No one in world will disagree with that. So, what's your point, Indian bigot?
 
lolz lets wait guys....just few more days to go and we'll all know who is winning the case....from what I see, Indian argument has upper hand.
what oh I see you yourself is indian.thank you but your comments are of no use.kulbhushan will be hanged.cheers

This is what happens, first all of them come on the forum do heart pumping and u can see 40 pages in two days, now when they realise that actually the situation is a bit critical and they might loose. We you can see its hardly 4 pages




hahahahaha cum on yar kasab was caught with a ak 47 firing and killing people, you think any country needs more than that to not give u access. He was lucky to npot to b killed on spot and anyways why do u needed the access? to tell him GOOD JOB ?
Jadhavs case is completely different, next wud suggest to caught a spy and present guns, shells, missiles that he was carrying and then kill him in self defence next day without even going to court
You Indians had that much tiny and closed minds.
On one hand you say that kulbhushan vid was a doctored one but in the kasabs case you rely on that same vids which can be doctored too
 
KY is very important for India as it can be seen by India going all the way to ICJ to get his release. This is one of the many signs of how important he is for India. He holds extremely valuable intelligence that is now under the custody of Pakistani intelligence agencies. The way intel agencies work all around the world, he would probably be killed quietly at a later time even if gets to go back to India making it look like a natural death due to illness or an accident. The score so far ISI = 1 , RAW = 1
 
India :rofl:
Monday's hearing before the International Court of Justice at the Hague may appear to be a victory for India in terms of political points scored back home, but there were some key legal issues that Pakistan did point out that require our consideration.

The legal issues stem from the fact that there was a 2008 bilateral agreement on consular access. An agreement that India sought not to rely on at the Hague on Monday and merely restricted itself to the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations. In doing so, India made the point that the agreement had not been registered with the United Nations and therefore, India would have to restrict the argument to the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations alone.

This perhaps may be the first instance of a State disavowing a bilateral treaty, in accordance with which it has been acting, in the midst of a court proceeding. The ICJ is not an ordinary court in the strictest sense, the ICJ is a diplomatic body and statements made before the ICJ have consequences. Which is why States are represented by agents who instruct counsel to argue the case for them, rather than just counsel alone. Statements made by an agent or an agent via their counsel bind the State in the international fora.

By refusing to acknowledge the 2008 Agreement, India could have well just terminated that agreement. The agreement is critical for the fate of many Indian fishermen who end up straying into Pakistani waters year after year as it called for the exchange of prisoner lists and consular access.

Harish-Salve-at-ICJ-380-ICJ-website.jpg

Harish Salve at the ICJ. Image credit: webtv.un.org

Coming to the point of consular access, one of the key arguments that Pakistan raised before the court was that India had failed to prove the nationality of Kulbhushan Jadhav. While to many this may seem like a technicality, it is not. In the case of Mexico versus United States (The case concerning Avena and other Mexican nationals; more commonly the Avena Case), the ICJ was quite clear on the point that in order for a State to exercise diplomatic protection, it must prove that the person it is trying to protect is a national of that State. Pakistan raised the dispute in court on Monday, as India was not dealing with the Indian passport with which Jadhav was found.

While there is abundant evidence that may exist to prove that Jadhav is an Indian national, this evidence was not put before the court. Instead India relied solely on Pakistan's assertion that he was an Indian spy. If we are disputing the Pakistani narrative of things, it becomes incumbent upon India to prove that the Pakistani narrative is false. Towards this, among the many annexes in India's pleadings before the ICJ, annexing Jadhav's birth certificate or perhaps a copy of his original passport would have gone a long way in countering this objection by Pakistan.

Put simply, not all spies are of the same nationality as the State for which they are spying. Sometimes foreign spies can be engaged as well (think James bond and how he always had someone local working for British Intelligence if you need to understand it simply). We still have a burden to prove he is a national of India.

The other is the ground of jurisdiction and reliefs. India has approached the ICJ to ask Pakistan to release Jadhav on the grounds that his rights under the Vienna Convention had been violated or in the alternative, to declare that the military court trial was unfair and not carried out in accordance with International Law, and order a new trial ie relief by way of restitution in integrum, which is legalese for returning to the original condition.

This becomes very problematic in light of the jurisprudence of the ICJ and in particular the fact that the ICJ is a body for the pacific settlement of disputes between States and not individuals. The Vienna Convention does not provide for the right to fair trial. Indeed the right to fair trial even though recognised under International Law is not one that is justiciable before the ICJ in a case where the Vienna Convention has been breached. Let us take an example. Tomorrow, if an Indian were to be put through the kangaroo courts of North Korea and sentenced to death, if India had consular access to that Indian, there is precious little India could do to have that trial set aside, as North Korea has the right under International Law to run its affairs in accordance with its sovereign rights.

Now if the final relief is one that the court cannot grant, then interim relief is something the court may be unlikely to grant in this case. In the La Grande Case (Germany versus United States), the court held that as a way of restitution, a full new trial need not be provided and in fact, even if review and reconsideration taking into account that consular access was not provided would be sufficient relief for restitution in integrum.

In the Mexico versus United States case the Court at Paragraph 122 held:

"The Court reaffirms, that the case before it concerns Article 36 of the Vienna Convention and not the correctness as such of any conviction or sentencing. The question of whether the violations of Article 36, paragraph1, are to be regarded as having, in the causal sequence of events, ultimately led to convictions and severe penalties is an integral part of criminal proceedings before the courts of the United States and is for them to determine in the process of review and reconsideration. In so doing, il is for the courts of the United States to examine the facts, and in particular the prejudice and its causes, taking account of the violation of the rights set forth in the Convention."

Further, in the same case, Mexico had contended that failure to grant consular access would lead to a violation of due process making the trial unfair. This is the exact argument India is going with before the court. The court however was very clear on this point and at Paragraph 124 said:

"Whether or not the Vienna Convention rights are human rights is not a matter that this Court need decide. The Court would, however, observe that neither the text nor the object and purpose of the Convention, nor any indication in the travaux preparatories, support the conclusion that Mexico draws from its contention in that regard."

By saying this, the court refused to review if the trial had been fair or not and in terms of the relief held that review and reconsideration along with clemency may be valid means of remedy rather than setting aside the trial itself. (See Para 141,142 and 143) saying on the point of a clemency procedure:

"The Court considers nevertheless that appropriate clemency procedures call supplement judicial review and reconsideration, in particular where the judicial system has failed to take due account of the violation of the rights set forth in the Vienna Convention, as has occurred in the case of the three Mexican nationals referred to in paragraph 114 above" (Para 143)

It would be wise at this stage to point out that India, in none of its pleadings before the court, has asked for consular access as a prayer, including in its main pleas before the court. None of them include a relief by way of a direction that Pakistan grant consular access to the Indian national concerned: Which is the relief to address India's primary and continuing grievance under the Vienna Convention. Consular access would help Jadhav find lawyers to fight his appeal and also help him liaison with his family back home. The primary aim of the Vienna Convention is to facilitate those rights. However, in the reliefs sought before the ICJ, India has not asked for consular access to be granted either as a final or as an interim relief.

Last but not least, India failed miserably on Monday to establish urgency before the court. The chances of its interim application being allowed largely evaporated when Pakistan agreed to consent to an early hearing for quick disposal of the matter. Further, in all previous cases there was a lot more urgency before a State went to the court. In the first case of this kind — Paraguay versus the United States, Paraguay approached the court on 3 April, 1998 when the execution date for its national was set for 14 April, 1998. There were around two weeks to go.

Kulbhushan-Jadhav_PTI13.jpg

File image of former Indian naval officer Kulbhushan Jadhav. PTI

In La Grande (Germany versus United States), the execution was scheduled for the following day and in the Mexican case, there was around a month. If Pakistan is able to establish that Jadhav won't hang within the time that the case could be heard and disposed off by the ICJ then there is no chance of India getting an interim measure. Pakistan was able to do so by pointing out that there was still time before the execution and therefore the court need not intervene.

Let us now revisit the key fact that the ICJ is a diplomatic body and not a court per se. It exists to have States settle disputes peacefully rather than go to war. The court will be reluctant to interfere in the internal workings of a State unless it has to. This is why India also hardly ever goes to the ICJ to litigate. Quite likely, this is the first time India has applied as an applicant to the court to seek substantive relief. The last time India was before the ICJ as an applicant in 1971 was when it challenged a decision by the International Civil Aviation Organisation on the grounds that it did not have jurisdiction. It has been consistent Indian policy to have affairs settled bilaterally rather than invoking the jurisdiction of the ICJ.

Which makes this author wonder why India has suddenly decided to do this. The Vienna Convention is a very strict convention. It requires that the person arrested be informed of their right to consular access and also requires that this access be supplied at the earliest. Tomorrow, if a terrorist is picked up in Jammu and Kashmir, and the authorities fail to inform him of his consular rights, Pakistan could suddenly make an application against us before the ICJ. Bilateral relations work better for States that share long borders and keep facing the problem of nationals slipping in from one territory to another. To invoke a multilateral framework and at the same time disavow a bilateral one is something that India has seldom done.

After Monday's hearing, one really wonders if the advice of the legal mandarins in the Ministry of External Affairs is being heeded or if India is purely moving this case as a result of a political decision.

REF: India's Application

REF: Mexico's Pleadings

REF: Mexico Judgment



Published Date: May 16, 2017 11:26 am | Updated Date: May 16, 2017 02:38 pm


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