Many of the Indians onboard hailed from Gujarat, officials said. Sanjay Kharat, a senior Gujarat police official, said authorities had obtained the names and addresses of 21 persons from the state who were on the flight, and that investigators were trying to determine who facilitated their travel. "Our teams have already spoken with some of them ...(or) their family members," he said.
The flight was operated by Romania's Legend Airlines. Its lawyer Liliana Bakayoko declined to name the client who chartered the plane, citing contractual confidentiality.
Nexus identified
An official at India's home ministry, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters the registration of the chartered flight and "people operating this entire nexus" had been identified, but declined to elaborate. A ministry spokesperson did not respond to an email seeking further comment.
French authorities placed two of the passengers on "assisted witness" status after investigating them for suspected people smuggling, while another 25 remained in France to apply for asylum. In France, "assisted witness" is an intermediate status between that of a witness and an indicted suspect.
However, the judge later freed 25 of the passengers after the head of border police failed to present the case in the given timeframe.
The Home Ministry official said immigration officials were also being questioned to see if any children had left India unaccompanied. "All these people landed in (the UAE) at different times, and they congregated to leave on the same plane. They had legal tourist visas to enter Dubai," the official told Reuters.
What happened so far
The plane was held in France a day after the US State Department said it would impose visa restrictions targeting individuals operating charter flights into Nicaragua for migrants heading towards the U.S.-Mexico border.
According to US Customs and Border Protection data, the number of Indians caught trying to enter the United States illegally has tripled over the past three years. US authorities caught 96,917 Indians between October 2022 and September 2023, up from 30,662 three years earlier.