CBI says no penalty in Shankaran extradition case
Ravi Shankaran is accused of Naval War Room leak case of classified information
By : DC Correspondent
Update: 2014-04-08 16:51 GMT
New Delhi: The UK High Court has not leviedany penalty on CBI while rejecting its bid for extradition of Naval War Room leak case accused Ravi Shankaran, CBI spokesperson said here.
CBI spokesperson Kanchan Prasad said that in its order dated April 1, 2014, the UK High Court has not mentioned about any cost or penalty on CBI or Government of India.
"This has reference to news reports being published/telecast in certain sections of the media regarding order of UK High Court to pay Rs one crore as legal cost to Ravi Shankaran, an accused in a Navy War Rook Leak Case," she said in a statement.
The two-member bench of the High Court comprising Lord Brian Leveson and Justice Blake had ruled last week that "prima facie there is no case against Ravi Shankaran."
The bench had said the Indian court has not even commenced the trial till date, though the case was filed in June 2006.
The court ruling overrides the extradition order of British Home Secretary Theresa May in May last year and the earlier decision of District Judge Nicolas Evans.
Shankaran had challenged the Home Secretary's order in the High Court.
Shankaran is the key accused in the case of leaking classified information from the War Room to arms dealers.
He has been absconding since the case was registered by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) in March 2006.
The CBI revoked his passport in May that year and secured a Red Corner Notice against him after filing a charge-sheet in July 2006.
An extradition request was sent to the UK in 2007 following reports that he was in the country and was arrested by UK authorities in April 2010 on the basis of the non-bailable arrest warrants issued by the Court of Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, New Delhi.
Besides Shankaran, who is out on conditional bail, other accused in the case include sacked naval commander V K Jha, former Indian Air Force wing commander S L Surve and businessmen Abhishek Verma.
The case involves leakage of over 7,000 pages of defence information of sensitive nature from the naval war room and air defence headquarters.