American arrest and search behavior is venal behavior -- to call is animal behavior is an insult to the animals which are also creations of the Divine cosmic dance.
In the context of Devyani case, it is time India restores her dharmic pride in the traditions of 'niyama, sayama, shradha नियमसयमश्रद्ध– Right way of deciding things, restraint, reverence/sanctity” and teaches America on the principles of dharma in treating the human body as sacred.
There is divinity in every phenomenon and let not animal instincts be allowed to override cultured, human behavior which has been documented for millennia in Indian traditions. That takes us to another issue: Debate on Section 377 and sexuality as venality.
Published: December 18, 2013 09:42 IST | Updated: December 18, 2013 15:06 IST
Detention procedures applicable to Khobragade, US clarifies
In the case of the senior Indian diplomat, Deputy Consul General Devyani Khobragade, arrested in New York last Thursday, the U.S. Marshals Service (USMS), the “police” of the Department of Justice (DoJ) answered multiple media queries confirming that she had been “strip-searched.”
While it was also clear that she had been handcuffed, the USMS however shied away from providing further details surrounding the conditions of her detention between around 9.10am and 4pm that day, saying only that she was “was subject to the same search procedures as other USMS arrestees in accordance with USMS Policy Directives and Protocols.”
To understand these protocols better, The Hindu identified the specific protocol documents – known as Prisoner Operations Service Directives – that determine what actions the USMS can take against an inmate of the sort that Ms. Khobragade was considered to be.
The documents separately address three USMS protocols, respectively for “body searches,” “restraining devices,” and “DNA sample collection.”
According to the body searches protocols, there are four types of searches that the USMS is authorised to conduct: pat-down search, in-custody search, strip-search and digital cavity search. Of these the USMS and other sources have indicated that the strip-search was performed on Ms. Khobragade.
Defined as a “complete search of a prisoner's attire and a visual inspection of the prisoner's naked body, including body cavities,” the strip-search is typically ordered depending on the circumstances surrounding the prisoner’s detention, specifically whether the is a pre-trial detainee, which the diplomat was.
The USMS protocol mandates that when such a search is conducted Marshals should ensure they have “a private location that prevents all but designated personnel from viewing the prisoner,” and “all attempts to protect the modesty of the prisoner will be made to include modifying viewing and recording of CCTV.”
It also requires that only a deputy of the same-sex can conduct a strip-search unless the person conducting the search is a physician or nurse, and a witness of the same-sex as the person being searched must be present during the search.
The use of “reasonable force” is allowed if the prisoner refuses to cooperate in removing any article of clothing or otherwise impedes the deputy; however Marshals are called upon to do the search “in a professional manner, causing the prisoner as little embarrassment as possible.”
When conducting a strip-search, the deputy will instruct the prisoner to remove all loose articles and conduct “a thorough visual examination of the prisoner's body, from the top of the head to the bottom of the feet,” the protocol says.
The deputy then moves on to inspect behind each ear and look inside the prisoner's ear canals, nostrils, and mouth, checking under the tongue, roof of the mouth, and between the lips and gums.
They are also required to visually inspect down the front of the body, paying close attention to areas such as armpits, breasts, and genital area, the protocol says, including directing the prisoner to “spread her legs and bend forward at the waist [to] observe the anus area and genitals from the rear.”
“Conclude with an observation of the bottoms and between the toes of both feet,” the protocol advises.
In terms of the restraints that may have been used on Ms. Khobragade, USMS protocols firstly mandate that “All persons in the operational custody of the USMS will be fully restrained during transportation,” and the definition of “fully restrained” is that “handcuffs, waist chains, and leg irons (shackles) are required.”
Ms. Khobragade was undoubtedly in transit while under custody on Thursday, as it was initially the State Department’s Diplomatic Security Service that arrested near her daughter’s school, then handed over to USMS custody and finally she was produced in a courthouse later that day.
This implies that she is likely to have been “fully restrained” at several points during the day, as defined by the protocol.
Additional protocol-recommended restraints that may have been used include “padlocks, flex cuffs and security boxes.”
Finally, the protocols also call for DNA sampling for all prisoners facing criminal summons by a U.S. District Court for the purpose of facing federal charges “regardless of which federal law enforcement agency is the investigative agency.”
To this end USMS personnel are required to DNA sample collection kits and techniques as provided and advised by the FBI respectively.
Here too the use of “non-lethal force” is allowed within the protocols “as are reasonably necessary to detain, restrain, and collect a DNA sample from an individual who is unwilling to submit to DNA collection.”
According to DoJ documents the most common DNA “reference samples” collected from prisoners are “blood, oral/buccal swabs, and/or plucked hairs (e.g., head, pubic).”
http://www.thehindu.com/news/international/world/detention-procedures-applicable-to-khobragade-us-clarifies/article5473109.ece
India diplomat 'broke down' after US strip search arrest; govt to make statement in Parliament tomorrow
Agencies New Delhi, December 18, 2013First Published: 12:27 IST(18/12/2013) | Last Updated: 12:49 IST(18/12/2013)
A female Indian diplomat told how she broke down in tears after being arrested, stripped and cavity-searched in New York, as the US embassy became the focus Wednesday of outrage at her treatment.
The case has escalated into a diplomatic storm between the United States and India. Rajya Sabha MPs also expressed their anger over the issue on Wednesday.
"Government will make a statement on diplomat's arrest in US," said commerce minister Anand Sharma.
Devyani Khobragade is India's deputy consul general in New York. She was arrested last week on charges that she submitted false documents to obtain a work visa for her Manhattan housekeeper.
In an email to her foreign service colleagues in India, the 39-year-old Khobragade said she "broke down many times" and faced "repeated handcuffing, stripping and cavity searches."
Read | US confirms Devyani Khobragade was strip-searched
Read | US confirms Devyani Khobragade was strip-searched
Khobragade wrote in the email that she repeatedly told arresting authorities that she had diplomatic immunity only to suffer repeated searches as well as being jailed with "common criminals".
Read | Vienna Convention open to varied interpretations
Read | Vienna Convention open to varied interpretations
"I must admit that I broke down many times as the indignities of repeated handcuffing, stripping and cavity searches, swabbing, in a hold up with common criminals and drug addicts were all being imposed upon me despite my incessant assertions of immunity," she said in the email.
"I got the strength to regain composure and remain dignified thinking that I must represent all of my colleagues and my country with confidence and pride," she said.
In the email, Khobragade implored the Indian government to ensure her safety and that of her children and preserve the dignity of the Indian diplomatic service which was "unquestionably under siege".
An Indian official with direct knowledge of the case confirmed the email was authentic.
Read | Punish US diplomats with same sex companions: Yashwant Sinha
Meanwhile, US officials admitted on Tuesday that they strip-searched the Indian diplomat after she was arrested in New York in a new twist to a growing row that has seen India hit back with reprisals such as removing security barriers around the US embassy.
Meanwhile, US officials admitted on Tuesday that they strip-searched the Indian diplomat after she was arrested in New York in a new twist to a growing row that has seen India hit back with reprisals such as removing security barriers around the US embassy.
The US state department sought to calm tensions saying Thursday's arrest of Devyani Khobragade was an isolated case, and should not be allowed to damage the close ties between India and the United States.
But confirmation from the US Marshals service that Khobragade was treated like any person detained in the bustling metropolis will likely only further fuel Indian ire.
Read: India withdraws 'special courtesies' accorded to US diplomats
Read: India withdraws 'special courtesies' accorded to US diplomats
Khobragade was detained for allegedly underpaying her domestic helper who is also an Indian national and for lying on the helper's visa application form.
State department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf admitted it was a "sensitive issue" but insisted it was a "separate and isolated incident" which should not "be tied together" and allowed to affect broader "close" US-Indian ties.
While the state department is reviewing if all the correct procedures were followed, Harf stressed that the Indian embassy in Washington had been informed of the allegations against the consular official as long ago as September.
Read | Khobragade’s non-official duties not covered by diplomatic immunity: US
As a consular official, Khobragade does not have full diplomatic immunity, but has consular immunity which "only applies to things done in the actual functions of one's job," Harf added.
As a consular official, Khobragade does not have full diplomatic immunity, but has consular immunity which "only applies to things done in the actual functions of one's job," Harf added.
The diplomat had been arrested by the State Department's diplomatic security bureau, and then handed over to the US Marshals Service (USMS) to be processed through the court system.
In a statement, the Marshals confirmed she had been strip-searched and "was subject to the same search procedures as other USMS arrestees held within the general prisoner population in the Southern District of New York."
Although it did not confirm reports that Khobragade was placed with drug addicts, the statement added that she was held in a cell with other female detainees.
"Absent a special risk or separation order, prisoners are typically placed in the general population," the Marshals statement said, adding she had been put in an "available and appropriate cell."
Read | Indian diplomat's father says NY arrest 'barbaric'
Khobragade was released on a bond the same day, and after a review of her case the US Marshals found that the service had "handled Khobragade's intake and detention in accordance with USMS policy directives and protocols."
Khobragade was released on a bond the same day, and after a review of her case the US Marshals found that the service had "handled Khobragade's intake and detention in accordance with USMS policy directives and protocols."
"All indications are that appropriate procedures were followed. But nonetheless. We understand this is a very sensitive issue, and we're continuing to review exactly what transpired," Harf told journalists on Tuesday.
But the Indian government retaliated by ordering a range of measures including that US consular officials return the ID cards issued by the ministry of external affairs that speed up travel into and through India.
Tow-trucks and mechanical diggers were also seen taking away the heavy barriers which control traffic from the streets around the US embassy in New Delhi, raising fears for the safety of personnel.
Under international treaties, the host nation is responsible for ensuring the security of foreign missions on its soil, and Harf urged the Indian government to meet its obligations to protect US diplomats.
"We'll continue to work with India to ensure that all of our diplomats and consular officers are being afforded full rights and protections," she said.
"The United States and India enjoy a broad and deep friendship, and this isolated episode is not indicative of the close and mutually respectful ties we share," Harf said in an earlier statement.
The case is the latest involving alleged mistreatment of domestic workers by wealthy Indian families. Many are poorly paid in India and rights groups regularly report cases of beating and other abuse.
But the arrest also touches a number of hot buttons in India, where fear of public humiliation, particularly among the middle and upper classes, resonates deeply, and pay and conditions for servants is kept mostly private.
With general elections just months away in India, both the ruling Congress party and the main opposition are keen not to be seen to be too lenient with the United States over the issue.
Read | India withdraws 'special courtesies' given to US diplomats
Read | India withdraws 'special courtesies' given to US diplomats
Revenge in India's response: US media
India's response to the arrest and alleged ill-treatment of its diplomat Devyani Khobragade has been described in the mainstream American media as "revenge".
The Hill reported it as "an act of revenge", while The New York Times and The Washington Times described it as a "retaliatory" measure, and so did other media outlets.
"The clash between the two supposed allies escalated rapidly on the heels of last week's arrest of Devyani Khobragade, India's deputy consul general in New York. She was accused of submitting false documents to obtain a work visa for her Manhattan housekeeper," Fox News reported.
"India retaliated for the arrest of one of its diplomats in New York by dismantling security barriers on streets around the US Embassy in New Delhi and revoking some privileges given to American consular officials," the Wall Street Journal said.
Read | Vienna Convention open to varied interpretations
Read | Vienna Convention open to varied interpretations
A bulldozer removes the security barriers in front of the US embassy in New Delhi. (Reuters Photo)
Devyani Khobragade case: Meet Preet Bharara, the Indian-American prosecutor who brought down Rajat Gupta and took action against the diplomat | |
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India's Deputy Consul General in New York Devyani Khobragade would be fairly small fry for US Attorney Preet Bharara - the New York-based federal prosecutor who won the biggest ever insider trading case last month, against SAC Capital. But Indian-born Bharara has made it clear that there is no offender too big - or too small - to escape his attention. This month alone, actions initiated by his office and convictions include those against Wall Street executives, tax evaders, drug and arms dealers and an Indian American pharmacy owner in Queens. The escalating diplomatic row between India and the US over the arrest and treatment meted out to Khobragade is in fact the second such tussle set off by the actions of Bharara's office this month. She is charged with giving false information and documents to support her domestic help's visa application. On December 5, Bharara announced charges against 25 serving and former Russian diplomats and their spouses for allegedly defrauding Medicaid, an American state-run health care programme, to obtain about $1.5 million in benefits over a decade. No arrest was made in that case and Bharara said the case was unlikely to go to trial as the defendants had immunity. At a news conference held to announce the charges, Bharara said it was a case "we would be prosecuting and making arrests in, but for immunity". But he noted that participation in crimes by diplomats generally leads to expulsion from a country. The charges drew a sharp rebuke from Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov who blamed the criminal case on "Russophobic forces", although the US state department downplayed the case saying it should not affect bilateral ties. Talking about Khobragade's case, State Department Deputy Spokesperson Marie Harf said: "The US and India enjoy a broad and deep friendship, and this isolated episode is not indicative of the close and mutually respectful ties we share." As the US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Bharara is considered to be one of the most powerful prosecutors in America and was handpicked by US President Barack Obama for this position in May 2009. His term expires next year and it is widely speculated he could run for higher political office. One of his predecessors, Rudy Giuliani, went on to become the Mayor of New York City and was a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination in 2008. Is Bharara targeting Indians? Mails circulating among South Block officials show Bharara has come under scanner for targeting people of Indian origin. Before spearheading proceedings against Devyani, Bharara had hit the headlines for prosecuting ex-McKinsey MD Rajat Gupta for insider trading charges. Many from the diplomatic community wondered why there was no thought given to bringing to justice those who committed crimes against India. It may be mentioned that US courts have been admitting law suits filed by pro-Khalistani groups against Indian leaders. Summons were issued to leaders like Congress president Sonia Gandhi and Union Minister Kamal Nath and even the Congress party in connection with the 1984 anti-Sikh riots. "How are the US courts concerned with a matter that did not occur within its territory?" a senior official wondered. The development surrounding Devyani brought back memories of Krittika Biswas, the daughter of an Indian diplomat posted at the Indian Consulate in New York, who was arrested in her school, handcuffed and forced to spend 28 hours in a detention cell for cyber bullying in February 2011. It was later found that another student was responsible for the crime. |
US seeks security of diplomats after India retaliates over Devyani Khobragade arrest | |
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The US on Tuesday appealed to India to uphold the Vienna Convention principles and ensure the safety and security of its diplomats stationed in the country, as New Delhi took a series of steps in response to the arrest and inhuman treatment of its diplomat in New York last week. "We have conveyed at high levels to the government of India our expectation that India will continue to fulfil all of its obligations under the Vienna Convention on diplomatic relations and consular relations. Obviously the safety and security of our diplomats and consular officers in the field is a top priority," the State Department Deputy Spokesperson Marie Harf told reporters at her daily news conference. "We'll continue to work with India to ensure that all of our diplomats and consular officers are being afforded full rights and protections. Safety and security of our facilities as well is something we take very seriously, and we'll keep working with the Indians on that," she said. Harf was responding to questions about the withdrawal of certain privileges given by India to US diplomats in the country after the arrest and the alleged inhuman treatment of Devyani Khobragade. The Indian government was informed about the allegations of visa fraud against Khobragade in September, she claimed. "The State Department advised the embassy of the Republic of India in writing in September of allegations of abuse made by an Indian national against the Deputy Consular General of India in New York," she said in response to a question. The United States will continue to have conversations with the Indian government to make sure their facilities are properly secured, Harf said. Top State Department officials, including the Deputy Secretary William Burns, the Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Nisha Desai Biswal and the US Ambassador to India Nancy Powell have been in close communications with top Indian officials in this regard, she said, adding that a lot of demarches have been issued by India on this issue. She said US Secretary of State John Kerry is aware of the issue. "We have called on them to uphold all of their obligations under the Vienna Convention, everything that they are obligated to do according to our diplomats' rights and all of the things that go under the Vienna Convention," Harf said. |
http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/devyani-khobragade-new-york-us-india-vienna-convention-principles-new-delhi/1/331695.htmlDevyani Khobragade case: Why we must humiliate the Americansby 8 mins ago It is good that India is in a mood to retaliate, but it is important for us to persist with it long after this is over. Moreover, we should equip ourselves with more laws to target foreign countries that use their domestic laws to blackmail or humiliate us. We should not take such affronts lying down anymore. In a limited sense, the transgressions of US minimum wages law by Khobragade will draw the usual Indian liberal nonsense: if we are in contravention of their law, we are the guilty party. Worse, some of us will also express sneaking admiration for the US's ability to enforce its own law, as opposed to our own inability - or systemic unwillingness - to enforce ours. Not only is this a na�-ve view, but bull. Hear what Khobragade had to say about her arrest, and judge for yourself if this is the right way to deal with a brech of minimum wages law. The Indian Express, quoting from her email to colleagues, has this Indian Foreign Service (IFS) officer saying this about her horrifying experience. “I must admit that I broke down many times as the indignities of repeated handcuffing, stripping and cavity searches, swabbing, hold up with common criminals and drug addicts were all being imposed upon me despite my incessant assertions of immunity.” Indians are the most gullible goops in the world when it comes to discerning the difference between an honest effort to implement the law and using laws to project power and blackmail other countries. The American government is the most sophisticated legally illegal enterprise in the world when it comes to dealing with people from other countries. And Americans are one of the most sophisticated bigots in the world. There are two reasons why we are so bad at recognising this: one is because we are very poor readers of real intent as we have not studied the west on our terms. The second reason is even worse: we are the most compromised individuals when it comes to America. Every bureaucrat and politician and media hack sends his or her children to America or Europe to study, or is given high paying jobs in US multinationals. Thus, many of them would have received favours from the American establishment. So when it comes to standing up to America to defend our own interests, our worthies are unable to take a strong view on what is right for our country. There is also a third reason: we are simply too self-absorbed and willing to forget and move on in the pursuit of narrow, short-term personal interest. The Americans will go to the ends of the earth to pursue Osama bin Laden or even their own Islamic terrorists for 10 years. We will forget Hafiz Saeed five years after 26/11. The Americans will not let us forget 2002 - not because they care about the Muslims they themselves ostracise in their own country, but because it is a useful stick to hold over someone who could be our next PM. There is also another counter-intuitive reason why we are unable to see American bad faith: America does not use its laws to harass its own citizens, while we do the exact opposite. Thus we are willing to stretch the argument and believe that America must be using its laws fairly against the rest of the world. What absolute rot. The truth is American agencies have sophisticated ways of using their laws against foreigners to defend their interests. Their laws may oppose torture, so they will use Guantanamo Bay to for torture and waterboarding against prisoners. President Obama vowed to shut it down, but Guantanamo is still around. Even if it is shut, they will ask allies in brutal Africa or Thailand to do their dirty work. Americans are forbidden by their own laws to indulge is assassinations abroad, but Obama has converted the CIA into a killing machine. Two years ago, they killed one of their own nationals - Anwar al-Awlaki, for example - because of his alleged terror links (not proven in a court of law). The Americans regularly use drones against civilians in Afghanistan and Pakistan and South Yemen on the plea that one among them may be a terrorist. To have plausible deniability, they even use private surveillance and security agencies as surrogate CIA agents. (Read Mark Mazzetti's eyeopening book, The Way of the Knife, to get a glimpse into this). Their freedom of religion laws will be used against the one country which actually allows everyone to practice and propagate his religion (India), but top allies like Saudi Arabia will get a free pass on this law. America will swear by free markets to lobby for Wal-mart, but will not recognise freedom for labour movement. Is free enterprise only about the movement of capital and not other factors of production? The Americans practice sophisticated racism. Thus they will use a Preet Bharara to target Khobragade (or Rajat Gupta or Raj Rajaratnam) so that it looks like Indian-Americans are implementing the law, and hence not racist, but the same laws will not be used to humiliate the Hispanics or Afro-Americans or the Saudis or American icons like the late Steve Jobs or to convict Richard Nixon or Bill Clinton. (Read the comments on a Washington Post story on Preet Bharara, where the commenter accuses Bharara of not following up on the alleged misdemeanours of some pillars of the American judicial establishment.) Americans, despite paying very little of the UN bill, will not allow US soldiers to serve under generals of another nation, and Americans accused of war crimes cannot be tried anywhere else but in holier-than-thou US of A. I can go on and on, but we must focus on the one issue I still left unaddressed: what do the Americans gain by targeting Khobragade? Or, for that matter, by denying Narendra Modi a visa, especially since Americans have always extolled business friendly politicians everywhere? Modi ought to have been their natural ally? In the Khobragade case, my guess is that the US government and arrogant Preet Bharara miscalculated on how India will respond. They thought there will be the usual diplomatic muttering under the breath and then business as usual. Moreover, the US can always count on compromised bureaucrats and corrupt politicians to abandon their own diplomat. But two things conspired to stiffen Indian spines. One, the IFS officers' body is not going to see one of their own humiliated thus. And two, Narendra Modi is another reason. The UPA has hanged Afzal Guru and Ajmal Kasab to undercut Modi's hard appeal, and Modi is due in Mumbai on 22 December. Khobragade is Mumbai's child and her father was a city bureaucrat before retirement. One can imagine how Modi would have damned the UPA for cowardice when he addresses Mumbai crowds. Which brings me to the last motive: why deny Modi a visa if you know he could well be the next PM? The US would never do this to a Saudi King, a Pakistani General or a Vladimir Putin or a Mossad agent, or a Chinese official, no matter what kind of atrocities they may have committed in their own countries. The answer is simple: the earlier visa denial was driven by the need to pander to the domestic evangelical organisations which were baying for Modi's blood. Evangelicals believe that Modi may act against their conversions agenda. The second reason is future leverage. The Americans want to use the visa as a bargaining chip in case Modi is the next PM, even though they hope he won't become the PM. They fear that he will play hardball - exactly what the US does always. The US fears its own kind more than weak-kneed Indians politicians. It is critical that India should not close the chapter on the Khobragade affair for a few conciliatory noises. We have to bare our fangs and show some muscle. The chances are the US will do a deal and extract concessions from the UPA government to let Khobragade off the hook. And the Indian side will bow to this blackmail and claim their hard stance has paid off and declare victory. I hope this story does not play out. There are times when we have to show we are Indians, and this is one of those times. The only right response to the Khobragade insult is to treat Americans the same way they treat our kind: catch hold of a technical violator of Indian law, do some handcuffing and "cavity searches" on some of the men arrested, and then bargain about Khobragade. At the very least, we should target Preet Bharara for humiliating an Indian diplomat and make sure he never enters this country again. |