New York: India's Congress Party president Sonia Gandhi has declined to provide a copy of her passport to a US court, saying that government of India had denied her permission to do so.
However, in a letter filed by her lawyer in a federal court in Brooklyn, New York, Gandhi "voluntarily" relinquished the plea of lack of personal jurisdiction "without prejudice to the plea of want of jurisdiction in relation to the subject matter."
Gandhi had filed a motion in the Brooklyn court seeking dismissal of a human rights violation case against her relating to the 1984 anti-Sikh riots, asserting she had not been served the summons as she was not in the US between Sep 2 and Sep 9 last year.
But holding that Gandhi's January 10 declaration was insufficient to prove her absence from US, Judge Brian M. Cogan had March 20 asked Gandhi to "provide a copy of her passport, showing her most recent entry and exit stamps into and out of the United States."
"In matters of disclosure of my travels, which are contained in the passport document, the Government of India has informed me that they would not permit such a disclosure," Gandhi wrote in a letter to her lawyer Ravi Batra.
"However, as I have nothing to hide, I voluntarily relinquish the plea of lack of personal jurisdiction."
"I may add that the present submission is without prejudice to the plea of want of jurisdiction in relation to the subject matter," she wrote.
Latest World News