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Indian fugitive awaits Dhaka court verdict
Indian fugitive Anup Chetia, who completed his jail term in Bangladesh in 2004, is awaiting the Dhaka High Court's verdict on his plea for political asylum, a media report said on Saturday.
Dhaka: Indian fugitive Anup Chetia, who completed his jail term in Bangladesh in 2004, is awaiting the Dhaka High Court's verdict on his plea for political asylum, a media report said on Saturday.
Chetia, who belongs to the outlawed United Liberation Front of Asom (Ulfa), a militant group accused of widespread violence in northeast India's Assam state, was nabbed for entering Bangladesh on forged papers, convicted and jailed about 10 years ago.
India has repeatedly alleged that Chetia is one of the many Ulfa leaders, including top leader Paresh Baruah, living in and operating from Bangladeshi territory. Dhaka has consistently denied this.
Awami League chief Shaikh Hasina, who won the parliamentary elections earlier this week, has told media during interviews that she would not allow her country's territory to be used for anti-India activities.
When Chetia completed his jail term in 2004, the then government of Khalida Zia did not give India his custody on the ground that a human rights group had raised objections and had moved court. The group was headed by the wife of a top functionary of the Zia government.
Chetia is one of the 330 Indian nationals languishing in Bangladeshi jails, long after their terms are over "because of bureaucratic and diplomatic tangles", the Daily Star newspaper said. "His jail term ended in December 2004. After expiry of jail term, he sought political asylum in Bangladesh, which the government turned down," a jail official said.
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