Showing posts with label Kim Davy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kim Davy. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

PURULIA ARMS DROP CASE: India to initiate fresh moves to bring Davy to justice!


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August 3, 2011 / PTI, New Delhi / DC.

India will soon be sending a fresh proposal to Denmark seeking a trial of Purulia arms drop case accused Kim Davy through video conferencing from Danish capital Copenhagen and getting his deposition before a team of officials is sent from here.
CBI, probing the case, will take a legal opinion on the matter soon but the agency is open to trial through video conferencing from Copenhagen as the Danish High Court had in a verdict turned down its plea of extraditing Davy, official sources said.
The decision to seek trial by video conferencing was arrived after a through review meeting between CBI and the Home Ministry, after which the proposal of getting Davy deposition by sending a team of officials from here was agreed upon, the sources said.


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Friday, July 8, 2011

PURULIA ARMS DROP CASE: India talks tough to Denmark on Kim Davy issue!

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New Delhi: India has talked tough to Denmark on the extradition fiasco of Kim Davy, the main accused in the Purulia arms dropping case. Sources say, Copenhagen is obliged to ensure that Davy, a terrorist and a gunrunner, doesn't get shelter in Denmark.
India has also warned Denmark of similar non-cooperation with respect to Indian criminals wanted by Danish authorities, if it doesn't ensure Davy's extradition to face trial here.
The warning of reciprocal action comes after the Danish government has pleaded helpness in appealing to the Supreme Court against the High Court decision.
India talks tough to Denmark on Kim Davy issue



Is this tough talk for the public consumption, as it is rumoured that there has been a systematic sabotage of the CBI case and failure of the Ministry of External Affairs to represent its case in the Danish Courts, properly, to avoid bringing Davvy back into India to try under Indian laws, to ensure the real funders of the entire operation among the Indian Political Establishment?!


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PURULIA ARMS DROP CASE: Davy case: India may make fresh diplomatic move with Denmark!

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Peter Bleach, the main accused in the Purulia arms drop case, being produced at a court in Kolkata - PTI

The Government may make a fresh diplomatic move with Denmark after it refused to file an appeal in its Supreme Court for the extradition of Kim Davy, an accused in the Purulia arms drop case, to India.
The CBI is also mulling other options to bring Davy to trial, including through video conferencing, after weighing other legal options.
Jorgen Steen Sorensen, Denmark's Director, Prosecution, also acknowledged that a case against Davy has been made. "...both the District Court and the High Court agreed for example, that the evidentiary basis for extradition is sufficient, that the double criminality requirement of the Extradition Act is satisfied and that the case is not time barred," Sorensen said in a statement last night. In a separate statement, the Danish Foreign Ministry asked India to "appreciate" the Danish judiciary.
Official sources here said a diplomatic contact with the Danish Government was necessary to impress upon the fact that Davy alias Niels Holck had admitted before a Danish court about his involvement in the Purulia arms drop case. The sources said post-9/11 attacks, Denmark had amended its Constitution thereby agreeing to extradite any person involved in any act of terror.
The arms dropping was aimed at fomenting terror activities mainly in Purulia in West Bengal, they said. India's hopes of extraditing Davy were dashed last night when the Director of Public Prosecutions said that the Prosecution Service will not to seek permission to bring the question of extradition of Davy to India before the Supreme Court. Sorensen said he fully understands the attention which this case has attracted in Denmark as well as in India.


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Sunday, July 3, 2011

PURULIA ARMS DROP CASE: Kim Davy - Intergovernmental Secret Parlays!

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A VVIP state guest who shuns red carpet

Last Updated : 02 Jul 2011 11:38:38 PM IST / http://expressbuzz.com.


Kim Davy
Photo Courtesy: rediff.com

It is not very well known that it took five years, after Interpol traced Kim Davy to Denmark in 2002, for Denmark to consider his extradition. That was after the attacks on New York forced changes in Denmark’s terror laws. New Delhi then entered into extraordinary negotiations to pave the way for extradition of someone who dropped over four tonnes of arms in Purulia, near Ananda Marg headquarters. To characterise what followed as ‘negotiations’ would be a misuse of the word as you will see, but first, Denmark wanted to know what kind of evidence there was against Kim Davy, what the Indian laws were, how long the legal process would take and what kind of sentencing could be anticipated. Over a year this to and fro continued. Denmark wanted India to make certain promises to safeguard Kim Davy’s well-being during the trial process, if he were indeed to be extradited.
New Delhi agreed to all the conditions over three installments. Initially, Denmark was not happy with the wording of the conditions, so New Delhi acceded to the language Denmark wanted. We gave in to every comma, full stop, semi colon in Denmark’s formulation. We signed on the dotted line. Eight very specific assurances were sought and all eight were solemnly pledged. India promised, among other things, that Kim Davy, protected by European convention, would be transferred to Denmark within three weeks after sentencing to serve out his sentence; in case he received capital punishment, his sentence would automatically be commuted to life. Denmark was given to understand that the trial period could be between six months to a year, because the evidence had already been accepted by court.


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Thursday, June 30, 2011

PURULIA ARMS DROP CASE: CBI loses case, Kim Davy won't be extradited!

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NDTV Correspondent, Updated: June 30, 2011 18:47 IST.


New Delhi:  The CBI has lost its case to have Kim Davy extradited to India. The Danish High Court has rejected Denmark's decision to send Mr Davy to stand trial in India for what's known as the Purulia Arms Case. The court said it was refusing the extradition on humanitarian grounds. The five judges expressed concern about reports of overcrowded prisons, police torture and poor human rights records in India.

Mr Davy, who is 49, is wanted by India for dropping AK-47 rifles, anti-tank grenades rocket launchers and over 25,000 rounds of ammunition over Purulia in West Bengal on the night of December 17, 1995.

The CBI claims the weapons were meant for a sect called the Ananda Marg, who wanted to revolt against West Bengal's Communist government.


After Kim Davy threatening to expose the politicos behind the Arms Drop deal to overthrow the then Left Front Government, through armed disturbance, the CBI seems to have cooled down its hot pursuit of Kim Davy as he would be more damaging in India than abroad!

As to the comments of the five judges on poor human rights conditions in India, the prime reason stated for the denial of the extradition, we will have to wait the official response to it.


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Thursday, May 26, 2011

Purulia Arms Drop Case: CBI probe to trace ‘politician’ who helped Kim Davy escape!

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Published: Thursday, May 26, 2011, 23:27 IST 
By DNA Correspondent | Place: New Delhi | Agency: DNA




The CBI wishes to write “the last chapter” of the Purulia arms drop case as the agency wants to know the name of a politician, if any, who had helped the main accused Kim Davy escape from Mumbai airport.
After returning from Denmark, in an attempt to extradite Davy, CBI team is hoping that the agency will get order in its favour, as it represented its facts very strongly before the Danish court. 
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Friday, May 20, 2011

Danish HC rejects Davy's plea of old warrant!

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Peter Bleach, the main accused in the Purulia arms drop case, being produced at a court in Kolkata - PTI

The Danish High Court, which is hearing the extradition case of Purulia Arms drop case accused Kim Davy, has rejected his plea that since the warrant produced by the CBI was an old one it cannot not be the basis for handing over him to India.
Facing criticism for the blooper in the extradition case after it was pointed out that warrant issued by Kolkata court was an old one, the CBI managed to convince the High Court with the help of local officials that as per Indian law a warrant issued by a competent court remains in force till it is executed or it is cancelled by the same court.
On Monday, advocate for the accused Niels Holck alias Kim Davy made a submission that the warrant against his client was old one after which the CBI got it extended from the special court in Kolkata.
As per section 70(2) of CrPC, a warrant issued by a competent court remains in force till it is executed or it is cancelled by the same court. There is no question of a warrant getting expired as reported in a section of media, CBI spokesperson Dharini Mishra said in a statement.
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Thursday, May 19, 2011

Kim Davy Extradition: Documents 'in order' now: CBI after Purulia botch up!

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19 MAY, 2011, 05.49PM IST,IANS 


NEW DELHI: Under fire for carrying an expired arrest warrant to Denmark that botched up the extradition of Kim Davy, the main accused in the 1995 Purulia arms drop case , the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) Thursday said its documents have been put "in order" now. 

Terming the goof-up as an "oversight", a CBI official told media that the agency has sought revalidation of the warrant, which will be extended till Aug 20. The warrant that a CBI team took to a Danish court had expired in January. 

The agency got the fresh warrant from the special CBI court and a scanned copy was sent immediately to the team in Copenhagen. 



I think CBI did it purposefully.


Full story at,
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/documents-in-order-now-cbi-after-purulia-botch-up/articleshow/8442820.cms


The original copy of the warrant has also been sent to Copenhagen for the court hearing in Denmark that resumed Thursday.