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Pak Seeks Extradition Of Baloch Leader Bugti From Switzerland

Islamabad, Sept 11: The Pakistani  government has asked the Swiss counterparts  to reject the plea for political asylum made by Bramdagh Bugti,  chief of the separatist Baloch Republican Party, and extradite him to Pakistan.Swiss authorities

PTI Published : Sep 11, 2011 19:56 IST, Updated : Sep 11, 2011 20:16 IST
pak seeks extradition of baloch leader bugti from
pak seeks extradition of baloch leader bugti from switzerland

Islamabad, Sept 11: The Pakistani  government has asked the Swiss counterparts  to reject the plea for political asylum made by Bramdagh Bugti,  chief of the separatist Baloch Republican Party, and extradite him to Pakistan.


Swiss authorities in Berne say they will consider the request, reports The Dawn.

Thirty-year-old Bugti  also heads the separatist Baloch Republican Army which is fighting for independence from Pakistan. His father was brutally killed by Pakistani army during Pervez Musharraf's rule.
 
Bugti has been accused of attacks against outsiders settled in Balochistan, government installations, oil  and gas pipelines and the armed forces.

A Pakistani officials said, evidences of his involvement in subversive activities have been handed over to the Swiss officials.
 
A Western diplomat however said that Bugti has denied Pakistan's allegations and has alleged that he was facing threats to his life in Pakistan because of his “support for the freedom of Balochistan”.

Bugti is the second rebel leader whose asylum has been officially opposed by the government. Islamabad had previously tried to block Hyrbyair Marri's application for asylum in the United Kingdom. However, he succeeded in getting it this year after being initially rejected by the Home Office.

Bugti has been on the run since 2006 and initially took refuge in Afghanistan, where he stayed for almost four years. His stay in Afghanistan sparked a diplomatic row between Kabul and Islamabad, which had been demanding his handover.

The US and some of the Western countries, in an effort to defuse tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan and for improving their counter-terrorism cooperation, helped him to relocate to Switzerland, where he along with his family reached last year in October and sought asylum.
 
A UN agency is also believed to have played an active role in facilitating his transfer to Switzerland via UAE.

According to a Pakistani security official, Bugti traveled to Geneva on an Indian passport.  India vehemently denies this allegation.
 
Pakistan doesn't have an extradition treaty with Switzerland. However, the officials are still hopegul about getting his asylum plea rejected and ultimately extradited.

“For extradition a treaty is not essential. A sovereign country can always extradite a foreign national on legally maintainable grounds. Such precedents also exist,” a Pakistani official following Bugti's case explained.

But, what worries Islamabad is that Western governments have been generally sympathetic to Baloch separatists and some of them have, what some officials say: “indirectly patronized them”.

According to WikiLeaks, CIA station chief in December 2009 had discussed with Director General ISI Lt Gen Shuja Pasha the possibility of transferring Bugti to Ireland, which had promised asylum for him. But, Gen Pasha rejected the initiative stressing that he should be returned to Pakistan, where he would stand trial for his crime.

The proposal had been initiated by UNHCR, whose top brass desired to reciprocate the help by ‘Baloch people' in recovering kidnapped UNHCR official John Solecki.

Pakistani security agencies had alleged that Solecki had been kidnapped by Bugti and had asked US officials to directly speak to him (Bugti), while he was in Kabul.

The US had in February 2010 explored the possibility of swapping Bugti with Taliban leader Mullah Baradar, who was in the custody of Pakistani agencies. However, the idea was not encouraged by Pakistan. Mullah Baradar's transfer was later also blocked through a court ruling.

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