Did US mistreat Indian diplomat? Her country is furious.
The US promised Tuesday to look into the arrest, on visa fraud charges, of India's deputy consul-general in New York, but the indignation and retaliation has yet to abate.
A police officer stops a group of Indians protesting against the arrest of Devyani Khobragade, an Indian consular officer in New York, outside the US consulate in Hyderabad, India, Dec. 16. Khobragade was arrested in New York on charges she submitted false documents to get a work visa for a babysitter and housekeeper in her Manhattan home.
Mahesh Kumar A/AP
Washington
Recent cases of gang rapes of women in India, the impunity that the perpetrators of those crimes can often count on, and the low status of women in India in general have all commanded widespread attention in the United States 鈥 much to the chagrin of many Indian officials and media pundits.
But now the case of a female Indian diplomat arrested in New York City on visa fraud charges has allowed a furious Indian government and indignant domestic media an opening to turn the tables on the US 鈥 although in the process creating a diplomatic row that on Tuesday continued to escalate.
At issue is the arrest last week of the deputy consul-general of India鈥檚 New York consulate. Devyani Khobragade is accused of making false statements on the visa application of an Indian national she brought to the US to work as household help 鈥 and of paying the employee less than the US minimum wage.
The diplomat, arrested and handcuffed as she dropped her daughter off at school, was later released on $250,000 bond 鈥 but not before she was strip-searched and held with hardened criminals, according to her lawyer.
India鈥檚 national security adviser, Shivshankar Menon, blasted the diplomat鈥檚 treatment as 鈥渄espicable and barbaric鈥 鈥 words that seemed to echo the terms that many in the US used to describe the official treatment afforded India鈥檚 gang-rape victims. Not to be outdone, India鈥檚 external affairs minister, Salman Khurshid, described Ms. Khobragade鈥檚 treatment as 鈥渁 form of indignity (that) is for us completely unacceptable.鈥
The Indian government presented a formal complaint to the US ambassador in New Delhi.
The US initially downplayed the incident, with State Department officials insisting that standard procedures were followed in the course of the arrest, and countering India鈥檚 claim that Khobragade should have been shielded by diplomatic immunity with the argument that such immunity extends only to official duties.
But as the row showed no signs of abating Tuesday 鈥 Indian authorities were demanding that US consular officials in India relinquish their identity cards, and some high-level Indian officials, including the leaders of India鈥檚 two major political parties, canceled scheduled meetings with a visiting US congressional delegation 鈥 the State Department shifted its tone.
鈥淲e understand that this is a sensitive issue for many in India. Accordingly, we are looking into the intake procedures surrounding this arrest to ensure that all appropriate procedures were followed and every opportunity for courtesy was extended,鈥 said State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf in a statement.
Calling the arrest an 鈥渋solated episode鈥 that does not reflect 鈥渢he close and mutually respectful ties鈥 that the US and India share, she said the two countries would 鈥渃ontinue to work this issue 鈥 in the spirit of partnership and cooperation that marks our broad bilateral relationship.鈥
Rhetoric 鈥 not to mention actions 鈥 in India have not yet shifted to repair mode, however. On Tuesday the Indian police used tow trucks and backhoes to remove the security barriers protecting the US Embassy compound in New Delhi. Indian police said the removal had to do with traffic-flow improvement, but Indian media reported anonymous government sources citing the barrier removal as part of a list of retaliatory measures.
In the same vein, some officials said the government would investigate the pay and working conditions of Indians working for US diplomats.
But the heated reporting and official indignation also seemed to reveal something about the status of women in India. TV journalists made a beeline to Khobragade鈥檚 father to get on camera his view of his daughter鈥檚 treatment.
And Narendra Modi, leader of the opposition Bharativa Janata Party who would become India鈥檚 next prime minister should the opposition win national elections next year, sounded a bit old school when he proudly tweeted out having stood up the visiting US congressional delegation.
鈥淩efused to meet the visiting USA delegation,鈥 he wrote, 鈥渋n solidarity with our nation, protesting ill-treatment meted (out) to our lady diplomat in USA.鈥