This development is unlikely to come as positive news for the UK's Keir Starmer administration and the ongoing Free Trade Agreement talks between the two countries. Choksi on 9 September filed a lawsuit against the Indian government through the Ministry of External Affairs.
AIMING TO DELAY EXTRADITION
The filing of Choki's suit is likely intended to delay his extradition to India by invoking the UK courts and unleashing a media blitzkrieg in his favour by using psychiatric evaluation reports, backed by a well-funded PR campaign and bringing in lawyers and law firms who have a track record of first delaying and then completely denying the extradition of their clients.
One of the possible reasons behind his strategy to use the UK court as a forum is Choksi's belief that the UK political and administrative system will easily grant him asylum in the near future.
This is despite the fact that the incident he is relying on to escape his extradition― "an alleged kidnapping plot executed by Indian intelligence agencies"-happened not in the UK but in Antigua and Barbuda.
Choksi is currently based in Antwerp, Belgium, and receiving treatment at ZNA (Ziekenhuis Netwerk Antwerpen), a public hospital network in Belgium for multiple ailments that he has been suffering for a long time now.
Choksi, the youngest of six siblings, has a brother in Belgium. His brotherin-law, Hani, remarried sister's death and is also settled in Belgium.
His brother, Chetan Chinu Bhai Choksi, also resides in Antwerp. India has a long standing extradition treaty with both the UK and Belgium.
LEGAL PROCESS IN UK: A LONG ROAD AHEAD
On 9 September, Choksi's counsel, led by the London-based law firm Simon Muirhead & Burton, along with its associates David Edward Phillips and counsels Edward Fitzgerald and Graeme Hall, submitted the "Particulars of Claim" to the High Court, King's Bench Division.
この記事は The Sunday Guardian の December 29, 2024 版に掲載されています。
7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。
すでに購読者です ? サインイン
この記事は The Sunday Guardian の December 29, 2024 版に掲載されています。
7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。
すでに購読者です? サインイン
₹G20' TO BE RELEASED IN APRIL ON PRIME
LOS ANGELES [US]: Viola Davis is all set to come up with the thriller 'G20'.
FREEZE 'THE WILD ROBOT' FRAME COMING ON JAN 24
Universal/DreamWorks Animation's highly anticipated animated feature, 'The Wild Robot', will be available for streaming on Peacock starting Friday, January 24.
BEER, BOOKS AND CONVERSATIONS: A CITY'S CULTURAL SOUL
FEMALE GAZE SANDHYA MENDONCA I find my city becoming duller by the year.
Hyundai teases Creta electric ahead of 2025 launch
Hyundai has officially teased the upcoming Creta Electric, its latest electric SUV, which is anticipated to launch at the 2025 Bharat Mobility Global Expo.
China proposes export controls on critical EV technology
China is planning to impose new export restrictions on technologies used to extract minerals vital for the global electric vehicle (EV) industry, signalling an escalation in its ongoing tech rivalry with the United States, CNN reported.
BAJAJ AUTO DOMESTIC SALES SLUMPED IN DECEMBER, OFFSET BY RISE IN EXPORTS
In December 2024, Bajaj Auto's total sales (including two-wheelers and commercial vehicles) stood at 3,23,125 units, marginally lower by 1 per cent compared to 3,26,806 units in December 2023.
M&M records 16 per cent increase in December sales
Automotive company Mahindra & Mahindra (M&M Ltd.) witnessed a 16 per cent increase in overall automotive sales, with 69,768 units in December, the company stated on Wednesday in its exchange filing.
Maruti registers 30 per cent increase in December sales
In December 2024, Maruti Suzuki India sold a total of 178,248 car units, which is about 30 per cent higher than a year ago period.
EVs READY TO FLY, NO NEED FOR FURTHER SUBSIDY: GOYAL
India's electric mobility space is \"absolutely ready to fly\" and there is no need for newer incentives or subsidies, Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal said Friday, after a meeting with officials from various ministries and stakeholders of the Indian EV ecosystem.
LONELINESS: THE 21ST CENTURY PANDEMIC
We are born 'lonely'. When a child is born, the first instinct is to cry. This crying is not just a physical or biological reflex but also a psychological expression of distress. A newborn instinctively tries to hold onto something. If you offer your finger, the baby will grasp it tightly with its little fist. This inherent loneliness persists throughout a person's life-at three, thirteen, thirty, fifty, or eighty years old-craving something to hold on to. This is because the ego, the I-tendency we are born with, is by definition lonely.