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Home  » News » India granted access to Headley: US

India granted access to Headley: US

By Lalit K Jha
June 05, 2010 10:09 IST
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India has been given access to David Coleman Headley, the Pakistani-American Lashkar-e-Tayiba operative who has confessed to his role in the Mumbai terror attacks, United States National Security Adviser James Jones said on Friday.

"Yes, access (to Headley) has been given. This is an ongoing process and I don't have any detailed information that will be helpful except to say that it is in the hands of right professionals from both countries," Jones told PTI at his White House office.

"We have fulfilled our commitment," he added.

However, Jones did not have detailed information about how and when a team of visiting Indian investigators was given access to Headley, who is being held in Chicago.

"We are very happy that in this world of terrorist activities, our two countries can work together to make sure that we exchange information rapidly, we exchange intelligence that we have, when we capture people we try to arrange for those people to be interviewed by all interested sides in the interest of solving the problems of these networks," he said.

Asked if access to Headley was going to be a one-time affair or whether Indian investigating agencies would be given access multiple times, Jones said, "I don't know, but the spirit of cooperation and respect for each other's position is alive and we have taken the first step. We just have to wait and see whether there is any other request beyond this one."

When asked what this case symbolises, the US national security adviser said, "If I were a terrorist, it would tell me that looks like India and the United states are working very closely together and that is going to make my job a lot more difficult and that's a good thing."

Jones added, "What we need is a network of countries that can operate in the same way with speed, with precision, with openness because there is not one country that is going to defeat terrorism; it is going to be many countries working together."

His remarks follow visiting External Affairs Minister S M Krishna's statement that investigations of this nature are very sensitive. The minister didn't clarify if the National Investigation Agency officers had interrogated Headley or not. A team of NIA officers had arrived in Chicago earlier this week with the objective of interrogating Headley.

"Investigations of this kind are of a very delicate and sensitive nature. We cannot go on spelling out day to day updates. Right now the time is not appropriate," Krishna said on Thursday evening.

"There is overwhelming evidence that Headley is a conspirator in the 26/11 terror attacls. India will use all the force at its command and will put forward the plea that we should have access to Headley," he said, but was quick to assert that New Delhi had been assured it would get access to Headley.

"We have been assured that we will have access to Headley. How it is going to be accommodated and how it is being arranged is something which is being worked out within the legal framework of the United States," Krishna had said.

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