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US, India reach deal to end feud over diplomat
New Delhi January 10 – The United States and India ended a month-long feud over a diplomat who was arrested, strip-searched and charged in New York for visa fraud with a deal Friday allowing the envoy to fly home.
The row began on December 12 when consulate official Devyani Khobragade was arrested on suspicion of filing false documents to obtain a visa for her domestic servant and then underpaying her.
Her arrest outside her childen’s school and treatment in custody, when the mother of two said she was subjected to a cavity search, outraged India which claimed she benefited from diplomatic immunity.
US prosecutors disputed this because she was a consular official, leading New Delhi to request Washington to grant her a G1 visa given to diplomats at India’s UN mission which is also in New York.
“Devyani given G1 visa by USA according her full diplomatic immunity. India transfers her back. She is now flying home,” Indian foreign ministry spokesman Syed Akbaruddin said in a tweet that confirmed the deal.
Just hours earlier, prosecutors had filed charges against her in a New York court.
The deal ends the dispute, but the two countries which had embraced each other as strategic partners must now count the cost of weeks of feisty exchanges which have left resentment on both sides.
India has removed extra security barriers at the US embassy in New Delhi, has demanded contract details for domestic staff employed by American diplomats and even stopped the mission importing duty-free alcohol.
On Wednesday, it ordered an embassy leisure centre popular with American expatriates in the capital to stop admitting non-diplomatic members, while scheduled visits by US officials to India have been cancelled.
The United States through presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama has invested heavily in improving ties with India which it has embraced as part of its “pivot” to Asia, designed to check Chinese influence.
India has benefited from US backing to gain access to foreign nuclear energy technology and Washington has become an important arms supplier and key market for India’s software and IT services exports.
The row exposed a gulf in perceptions and values between the two countries.
Khobragade, a wealthy 39-year-old, was seen at home as the victim of heavy-handed policing and her treatment was viewed as a humiliation of a India by the world’s superpower.
Domestic servants are routine for the middle classes in India where few employees have contracts, many are abused, and none make even a fraction of the US minimum wage.
US, India reach deal to end feud over diplomat | Capital News
New Delhi January 10 – The United States and India ended a month-long feud over a diplomat who was arrested, strip-searched and charged in New York for visa fraud with a deal Friday allowing the envoy to fly home.
The row began on December 12 when consulate official Devyani Khobragade was arrested on suspicion of filing false documents to obtain a visa for her domestic servant and then underpaying her.
Her arrest outside her childen’s school and treatment in custody, when the mother of two said she was subjected to a cavity search, outraged India which claimed she benefited from diplomatic immunity.
US prosecutors disputed this because she was a consular official, leading New Delhi to request Washington to grant her a G1 visa given to diplomats at India’s UN mission which is also in New York.
“Devyani given G1 visa by USA according her full diplomatic immunity. India transfers her back. She is now flying home,” Indian foreign ministry spokesman Syed Akbaruddin said in a tweet that confirmed the deal.
Just hours earlier, prosecutors had filed charges against her in a New York court.
The deal ends the dispute, but the two countries which had embraced each other as strategic partners must now count the cost of weeks of feisty exchanges which have left resentment on both sides.
India has removed extra security barriers at the US embassy in New Delhi, has demanded contract details for domestic staff employed by American diplomats and even stopped the mission importing duty-free alcohol.
On Wednesday, it ordered an embassy leisure centre popular with American expatriates in the capital to stop admitting non-diplomatic members, while scheduled visits by US officials to India have been cancelled.
The United States through presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama has invested heavily in improving ties with India which it has embraced as part of its “pivot” to Asia, designed to check Chinese influence.
India has benefited from US backing to gain access to foreign nuclear energy technology and Washington has become an important arms supplier and key market for India’s software and IT services exports.
The row exposed a gulf in perceptions and values between the two countries.
Khobragade, a wealthy 39-year-old, was seen at home as the victim of heavy-handed policing and her treatment was viewed as a humiliation of a India by the world’s superpower.
Domestic servants are routine for the middle classes in India where few employees have contracts, many are abused, and none make even a fraction of the US minimum wage.
US, India reach deal to end feud over diplomat | Capital News