New Delhi spares Italian marines from mandatory death penalty

New Delhi spares Italian marines from mandatory death penalty
Updated 08 February 2014
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New Delhi spares Italian marines from mandatory death penalty

New Delhi spares Italian marines from mandatory death penalty

NEW DELHI: India acceded to Italy’s request and said Friday it won’t invoke an anti-piracy law carrying the death penalty when it tries two Italian marines accused of killing two Indian fishermen.
A Home Ministry official said the government had decided against invoking the law against the marines, who are awaiting trial in India. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to talk to reporters.
India’s top court on Monday had ordered the government to decide within a week whether it would invoke the law. Details of what charges the marines would face during trial were not immediately known.
The Italians were on anti-pirate duty aboard a cargo ship in 2012 when they fired at the fishermen on an Indian boat, saying they mistook the fishermen for pirates.
Italy had objected to plans by India’s anti-terror agency to invoke maritime laws that carry the death penalty.
Italy claimed that New Delhi had assured it that the death penalty in India applies only in the “rarest of rare” cases, and the marines’ case did not fall into that category.
Italy has said the shooting happened in international waters during an international anti-piracy mission and thus, Rome, not India, should have jurisdiction. But a local Indian court insisted it would investigate and the marines were ordered held in India.