A diplomatic passport does not necessarily give one diplomatic immunity, pointed out New York-based attorney Anand Ahuja, while commenting on the arrest -- and subsequent release -- of Devyani Khobragade, India’s deputy consul general in New York on Thursday.
Article 17 of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations of 1963 specifically states, Ahuja pointed out, that non diplomatic acts by consulate officers do not confer any diplomatic privileges and immunities.
“The best example is of (former International Monetary Fund chief Dominique) Strauss-Kahn – (he was) handcuffed, taken out of his airplane, and put into the jail even though he claimed his diplomatic immunity,” Anand said.
Other legal sources agreed that diplomatic immunity was unlikely to be granted to Khobragade.
“It's not an official action, rather it's an employment contract subject to US laws,” pointed out one source. “Hence, there is criminal and civil liability -- as far as I understand.”
Ahuja said, “When we Indians, who are used to mistreating domestic servants back home in India, come to countries like the United States, where these workers enjoy a fair amount of legal protection, (we) continue treating them badly as if we still live in India. It’s when we are exposed to these laws of foreign countries that we realise that we are not living in India.”