Mumbai attacks: Prosecution refuses to seek Lakhvi’s voice sample
Says there is no existing law sanctioning such a move against an accused
Prosecutors have refused to file a fresh petition seeking voice samples of Mumbai attacks alleged mastermind Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi.
The chief of prosecution in the case, Chaudhry Azhar, said: “The government will not file a fresh petition in the trial court requesting for obtaining Lakhvi’s voice sample.”
He said a petition seeking his voice sample was rejected by a trial court in 2011.
“The issue of obtaining Lakhvi’s voice sample is over. We had filed an application in the trial court in 2011, seeking voice sample of Lakhvi but the judge (Malik Akram Awan) had dismissed it on the ground that no such law exists that allows obtaining of voice sample of an accused,” Chaudhry told the Press Trust of India.
“We have told India in writing that there is no law in Pakistan that allows obtaining a voice sample of an accused. Even there is no such law in India and the US,” he said, adding that such a law can be introduced only through parliament.
However, Ujjwal Nikam, the public prosecutor on the case in India, said that an ‘adverse inference’ has to be drawn with the accused refusing to give a voice sample and that the prosecution should have taken a voice sample earlier.
“Pakistan’s prime minister assured PM Modi that they were ready to give the voice sample, then how can Lakhvi refuse it? According to the law in Pakistan, if any accused person refuses to give voice sample, necessary adverse inference is required to be drawn,” he said.
Reacting to the criticism drawn by the Pakistani prosecutor’s statement, Pakistan High Commissioner Abdul Basit has warned against drawing any ‘premature conclusions’. He said both the sides have not met and discussed ways to expedite the trial as agreed in the joint statement issued after the two leaders met in Russia.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 13th, 2015.