Islamabad: Pakistan on Sunday said that it has "fully complied" with the International Court of Justice's (ICJ) judgement in the Kulbhushan Jadhav case, days after India's lead counsel asserted that New Delhi had hoped it might be able to persuade Islamabad through "back channel" to release the Indian death-row convict.
Jadhav, the 49-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 ICJ against Pakistan for denial of consular access to Jadhav and challenging the death sentence.
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Senior advocate Harish Salve was the lead counsel for India in the Jadhav case at the Hague-based ICJ which 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.
"We were hoping that through backchannel, we may be able to persuade Pakistan to let him go. If they want to say on the humanitarian ground or whatever, we want him back. We said to let him go. Because it has become a big ego problem in Pakistan. So, we were hoping that they will let him go. They haven't," Salve said on May 3 while speaking online from London.
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"We have written four-five letters. They just keep on denying. I think we have reached a point where we have to now decide whether we want to go back to ICJ for consequential directions because Pakistan has not moved ahead," he said.
Responding to Salve's remarks, Pakistan's Foreign Office Spokesperson Aisha Farooqui said Islamabad had noted the statements made by India's legal counsel in the Jadhav case.
While suggesting that India may have to go back to ICJ, Salve has made certain statements which are contrary to the facts of the case, she said.