MHA sends Bugti's asylum application for security vetting

Decision on Bugti's application for political asylum in India is likely to be taken by the Union Cabinet.

Update: 2016-09-27 13:12 GMT
Brahumdagh Bugti, the exiled leader of the banned Baloch Republican Party (BRP).

New Delhi: Baloch leader Brahamdagh Bugti's application seeking political asylum in India has been referred to security agencies for vetting before a final decision by the Union Cabinet.

"After examination of Bugti's application for political asylum, we have sent it to security agencies for an in-dept vetting. A security vetting is necessary for such applications before a final decision is taken," a Home Ministry official said.

The decision on Bugti's application for political asylum in India is likely to be taken by the Union Cabinet headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Bugti had applied for asylum in Indian consulate in Geneva last week and the application was subsequently forwarded to the Ministry of External Affairs, which in turn sent it to the Home Ministry.

India does not have a comprehensive asylum policy.

As per the United Nations, there are at least 6,480 asylum seekers in India but the government does not recognise them.

The situation is so complex that the officials in the Home Ministry are digging through 1959 records to check the process.

In 1959, Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama and his followers were granted asylum by the Jawaharlal Nehru government. Even the term 'refugee' is not mentioned in any domestic law.

India has not signed the 1951 United Nations Refugee Convention on the Status of Refugees, or its 1967 Protocol that stipulates the rights and services the host states must provide refugees. Bugti is President and founder of Baloch Republican Party.

He is the grandson of Nawab Akbar Bugti, a Baloch nationalist leader killed by the Pakistani army in 2006.

Pakistan government had blamed India for helping Bugti flee Pakistan to Geneva in 2010 via Afghanistan.

If granted asylum, Bugti could be given a long-term visa to be renewed every year.

Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasreen has been living in India since 1994 under long-term visa renewable every year.

The other scenario is that he will get registration certificate based on which he can travel anywhere in the world using it as a travel document, an official said.

Similar News