India will insist on direct access to Headley (Lead)
March 24th, 2010 - 7:03 pm ICT by IANS
Bangalore/New Delhi, March 24 (IANS) India Wednesday asserted it would insist on and was confident of interrogating David Headley over the Mumbai terror attack, a day after US ambassador Timothy Roemer said no decision had been taken on giving New Delhi direct access to the Pakistani American terror suspect.
“One day or the other, the US will have to agree and expedite the issue that Headley will have to undergo interrogation by our agencies,” Law Minister M. Veerappa Moily said in Bangalore.
Moily told reporters that “this is a matter (where) we need to press hard our argument and tell them what’s necessary. We have to make a strong case which we have already made out. He is involved, really involved (in the Mumbai attacks).”
Coinciding with Moily’s assertion, a home ministry official told IANS in New Delhi: “The government will go by what US Attorney General Eric Holder told Home Minister (P. Chidambaram). He (Holder) is the top boss of the justice department in the US government.”
He said New Delhi would soon ask the US authorities for specific dates to question Headley, who visited India more than once to look for targets that Pakistan-based terrorists could attack.
Eventually, 10 well-armed terrorists sneaked into Mumbai by sea from Pakistan and went on a killing spree in November 2008, leaving 166 Indians and foreigners dead.
“The government has already started preparations to form a team (to be sent to the US). The ambassador’s remark has not stopped that,” the official said.
Roemer Tuesday signalled a change in the US stance over giving India access to Headley, who is in US custody and has confessed to his role in the Mumbai attack.
“No decision on direct access for India to David Headley has been made,” the ambassador said.
In a snub to the American envoy, Home Secretary G.K. Pillai said late Tuesday: “I think we are not taking cognizance of the ambassador’s remarks.
“We are getting ready with our home work and would be taking it up with the US government for mutually acceptable dates for the visit of the team (of investigators to question Headley). We have no doubt whatsoever that the team would be going shortly,” Pillai told a news channel.
Pillai said the government was sure that Indian investigators would get direct access to Headley who last week in a Chicago court confessed to his role in plotting the Mumbai attack.
Headley will be spared the death sentence and will not be extradited to India after having entered into a plea bargain with prosecutors.
Two days after Headley’s confession, the US attorney general, also head of the Department of Justice, telephoned Chidambaram following which the home minister said: “It is my understanding that India would be able to obtain access to Headley to question him in a properly constituted judicial proceeding. Such a judicial proceeding could be either pre-trial or during an inquiry or trial.”
Roemer’s remark created a stir, with opposition parties targeting the government over the US flipflop.
The Indian government is under attack for allowing American investigators to talk to Mumbai’s lone surviving Pakistani terrorist, Mohammed Ajmal Amir alias Kasab, while failing to persuade the US to show reciprocity.
- India confident of getting 'direct' access to Headley - Mar 24, 2010
- No decision on giving India direct access to Headley: US (Lead) - Mar 23, 2010
- US hedges on access to Headley, BJP decries 'flip-flop' (Second Lead) - Mar 23, 2010
- No decision on direct access to Headley yet: US envoy - Mar 23, 2010
- US shared intelligence with valuable strategic partner India before 26/11: Roemer - Oct 28, 2010
- Headley row: India 'disappointed', US says it shared 26/11 info - Oct 27, 2010
- India to get direct access to Headley - Apr 28, 2010
- India will be satisfied if Headley gets lifer: Home Secretary - Mar 19, 2010
- Headley quizzed for 7 days without restraint (Second Lead) - Jun 11, 2010
- Access to Headley is not mere give and take: Roemer - May 12, 2010
- India to get access to Headley soon, says Solicitor General Subramaniam - May 01, 2010
- India set to have direct access to Headley (Second Lead) - Apr 28, 2010
- Four member NIA team to leave for US on Sunday to question Headley - May 29, 2010
- BJP slams US for 'flip-flop' over Headley access - Mar 23, 2010
- US 'working to bones' to provide India access to Headley - Jun 02, 2010
Tags: cognizance, david headley, direct access, eric holder, home minister, home ministry, home secretary, interrogation, killing spree, law minister, ministry official, New Delhi, p chidambaram, pillai, snub, suspect one, terror attack, timothy roemer, us stance, veerappa