Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
India

Being Made A Scapegoat, Says Indian Murder Accused To Be Extradited To UK

Darpan News Desk IANS, 30 Sep, 2019 08:14 PM

    A 34-year-old Indian man, likely to be extradited to the United Kingdom in the first week of October for allegedly committing rape and murder there 10 years ago, said through his lawyer on Sunday that he was being made a scapegoat since he hailed from a poor family.


    Aman Vyas, who is currently in judicial custody here, is likely to face trial in London over the murder of Michelle Samaraweera, a 35-year-old woman who was found dead at a children’s playground in east London’s Walthamstow in 2009.


    According to media reports, she was sexually assaulted before being killed.


    Speaking to press, Vyas’s lawyer Amrit Singh claimed that there was no “competent evidence implicating the accused in any crime”.


    “The media wrongly reported that Vyas was the son of a wealthy businessman in India. He is the son of a very poor retired private school teacher and his mother is a housewife. His parents live in a modest house in Uttar Pradesh’s Meerut and due to his poverty, he became a scapegoat as India wanted to bring back Vijay Mallya. Indian officials have negligently dealt with this case,” he said.


    Vyas was living in the UK on a student visa at the time and is also wanted for questioning over three other alleged sexual attacks, which also took place in east London before Samaraweera’s killing.


    On July 16, 2010, Vyas received a Police Clearance Certificate issued by the London Police, which he wanted for getting a visitor’s visa for himself for New Zealand, Singh said.


    The certificate said “he was not implicated in any case, and accordingly, it attested that there was no negative report against him”, the lawyer added.


    According to the London Police, only one individual was responsible for this serial crime of rape and one case of murder, but their own forensic scientist had a different opinion, Singh said.


    He added that the London court, which had issued an arrest warrant against Vyas on May 5, 2011, was not a competent court in this case and that the order was passed without a DNA match or equivalently reliable alternative evidence, and without any proper investigation to support the move to arrest.


    “The Government of India was aware that the warrant against Vyas was not from a competent court within the UK and to conceal this irregularity, they omitted to submit a copy of the warrant issued by the Barking Magistrate Court, London, and opted instead to submit false arguments in a Delhi court,” Singh said.


    The Delhi court ordered Vyas’s extradition to the UK on December 18 last year, after which he was taken into custody.


    Singh said his client would soon approach the Supreme Court against the order to extradite him to the UK.


    Vyas left the UK to live with his relatives in India after a warrant was issued for his arrest by Scotland Yard, the media had reported.


    He was arrested at the Delhi airport in 2011 while trying to board a plane to Thailand and was released on bail, the police said here.


    “I am delighted that my sister will finally get a trial after all these years,” Samaraweera’s sister Ann Chandradasa told a newspaper in London.


    Last year, Stella Creasy, the Labour MP of Walthamstow, had, on behalf of the victim’s family, urged the then British Prime Minister Theresa May to raise the case with Prime Minister Narendra Modi during his visit to the UK in April 2018 in an attempt to speed up Vyas’s extradition.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    ISRO Releases New Photos Of Moon Craters Taken By Chandrayaan-2

    ISRO Releases New Photos Of Moon Craters Taken By Chandrayaan-2
    Sharing the pictures, the ISRO said in a statement that the photos captured by the lunar spacecraft are those of craters Somerfeld, Kirkwood, Jackson, Mach, Korolev, Mitra, Plaskett, Rozhdestvenskiy and Hermite.

    ISRO Releases New Photos Of Moon Craters Taken By Chandrayaan-2

    Coming Out Of Closet Is Better Than Hiding My Relationship: Dutee Chand

    Dutee Chand said her aim is to make a mark in the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, for which she is yet to qualify. The women's 100m Olympic qualification standard is 11.15 seconds.  

    Coming Out Of Closet Is Better Than Hiding My Relationship: Dutee Chand

    Denied Jaguar, Angry Haryana Youth Pushes New BMW Into River

    "When the youth was plunging the high-end BMW car into the river, he also made a video and put it on social media," a police official told IANS.

    Denied Jaguar, Angry Haryana Youth Pushes New BMW Into River

    WATCH: Uber Helps This 31-Year-Old Woman Driver Achieve Her Dreams

    A woman cab driver may raise some eyebrows, but 31-year-old Mannu loves being one.    

    WATCH: Uber Helps This 31-Year-Old Woman Driver Achieve Her Dreams

    In 'New India', Noose Tightening On Corruption, Nepotism: PM Modi In France Times Of India

    Addressing the Indian diaspora at the UNESCO headquarters here, Modi said that his government was taking decisions in the spirit of "spasht niti, sahi disha (clear policy, right direction)".    

    In 'New India', Noose Tightening On Corruption, Nepotism: PM Modi In France Times Of India

    Nitish Bharadwaj Cast As Krishna Again, 30 Years After B R Chopra's Mahabharat

    "I always believe that stories from Mahabharata are relevant to today's 'kalyuga' also," said Nitish Bharadwaj

    Nitish Bharadwaj Cast As Krishna Again, 30 Years After B R Chopra's Mahabharat