Indian spy on death row allowed to meet family
ISLAMABAD: The Foreign Office on Monday hosted a meeting of convicted Indian spy Kulbhushan Jadhav with his mother and wife on “humanitarian grounds” and urged New Delhi to show a similar spirit.
“One good deed should beget another. Such decisions should serve as templates for others to follow, including in Indian-occupied Jammu & Kashmir, where innocent blood continues to be spilled,” Foreign Office spokesman Dr Mohammad Faisal told a media briefing held after Jadhav’s meeting with his family.
The spokesperson described Jadhav as the “face of Indian terrorism, especially in Pakistan” and said the meeting was allowed on humanitarian grounds on the occasion of Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah’s birth anniversary.
In his confession, Jadhav had admitted to his involvement in espionage, terrorist and subversive activities in Pakistan. Last month, Islamabad offered a meeting between the spy and his wife, but New Delhi conditioned its acceptance of the offer on permission for both, Jadhav’s mother and an Indian diplomat who would accompany her, which was accepted.
The nearly 40-minute-long meeting was held amidst tight security in a specially-built container on the Foreign Office premises, where Jadhav met his family.
Clad in a blue jacket, the spy met his wife Chetankul Jadhav and mother Avantisudhir Jadhav from behind a thick glass partition that did not allow physical interaction, and spoke through an intercom.
FO says New Delhi declined to hold joint press talk; rejects impression that this was last meeting between Jadhav and his family
Indian Deputy High Commissioner J.P. Singh, who accompanied the two ladies, observed the interaction through another glass partition where he could witness the exchange but not hear what was being said. However, the conversation was video-recorded and photographed, and a lady officer sat in the room alongside Jadhav’s family.
“They spoke openly during the meeting,” Dr Faisal said after the interaction.
The women arrived in Islamabad on a connecting Emirates flight from Dubai around 11:30pm and were received at the airport by the Indian deputy high commissioner.
Mediapersons camped outside the Rawal Lounge were not allowed to speak to the women and the area was cleared by security personnel as they exited the terminal.
The two ladies arrived at the Foreign Office around 1:15pm in an SUV bearing a green government licence plate and were dropped a short distance from the FO’s Agha Shahi Block. This meant they had to walk past the battery of journalists who had gathered to cover the meeting, and were then subjected to strict security protocols for nearly an hour, and were also made to change their clothes before the meeting.
A shawl they had brought along as a gift for Jadhav was retained for security clearance.