Islamabad: Pakistan said on Thursday that it was not legally possible to allow a lawyer from India to represent prisoner on death row Kulbhushan Jadhav in a court in this country.
Pakistan Foreign Office spokesman Zahid Hafeez Chaudhri was asked at the weekly press briefing about India's demand to appoint a local counsel to plead Jadhav's case in the Islamabad High Court (IHC) which announced that it would the case on September 3.
"The Indian side has been also making incongruous demands of allowing an Indian lawyer to represent Jadhav. We have repeatedly told them only those lawyers can represent Jadhav in the court who have a license to practice law in Pakistan. This is in accordance with legal practice in other jurisdictions also," he said.
The spokesman also said that the Indian Supreme Court, in one of its judgments, also ruled that foreign lawyers cannot practice law within the country.
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Jadhav, the 50-year-old retired Indian Navy officer, was sentenced to death by a Pakistani military court on charges of "espionage and terrorism" in April 2017. Weeks later, India approached the International Court of Justice (ICJ) against Pakistan for denial of consular access to Jadhav and challenging the death sentence.
The Hague-based ICJ ruled in July last year that Pakistan must undertake an "effective review and reconsideration" of the conviction and sentence of Jadhav and also to grant consular access to India without further delay.
"The ICJ judgment clearly says that the review and reconsideration process would be carried out in Pakistani courts as per the laws of Pakistan," Chaudhri said.