New Delhi: The treaty was first signed on 29 October 1901 between Britain, who was ruling India at the time, and Belgium and underwent amendments in 1907, 1911, and 1958.
After a 7-year-long wait, when Mehul Choksi, a fugitive diamond trader accused of defrauding the Punjab National Bank of over ₹13,500 crore, was arrested in Belgium last Saturday, Indian agencies made use of an almost 125-year-old treaty to extradite him to India.
India has appealed Belgium for Choksi’s extradition so that he can be tried for the charges levied against him in the country. But what’s the origin for this treaty
This extradition treaty was first signed on October 29, 1901 between Britain, which was ruling India at the time, and Belgium. It, according to reports, underwent amendments in 1907, 1911, and 1958. Even after India got independence from British rule, the two countries (India and Belgium) decided to continue the treaty through an exchange of letters in 1954.
A person can be extradited between India and Belgium for some serious crimes such as murder, manslaughter, forgery or counterfeiting of money, fraud, rape, extortion, illegal drug trafficking, and more.
Know the key features of this treaty