Swapna Suresh granted bail in the gold smuggling case. Photo: PTI
Kochi: The Kerala high court on Tuesday
granted bail to Swapna Suresh and seven others in a Unlawful Activities
(Prevention) Act (UAPA) case lodged by the National Investigation
Agency (NIA) in connection with the gold smuggling through diplomatic
channels, saying that prima facie it does not find that they committed
any terrorist act as alleged against them.
A bench of Justices K. Vinod Chandran and C. Jayachandran said the
facts of the case narrated before it and the charges alleged against the
accused “do not commend us to find the accused having any connection
with any terrorist act” as provided under the UAPA.
The court also said that it does not find that the actions of the
accused were a threat to the economic security of the country, since
there was no counterfeiting of high-quality notes and coins.
The bench also said there was “no question” of distinguishing those
granted bail in the case earlier as “back runners” and the present eight
accused as front runners, which was one of the contentions of the NIA
while opposing grant of any relief to them.
“..there is no question of
distinguishing the various accused arrayed as front-runners or
back-runners. Whatever be the role of the accused, the activity being
smuggling of gold, which cannot be deemed to be a terrorist act under
section 15 of the UAPA,” the court said.
The court granted bail to the eight accused subject to them
furnishing a bond of Rs 25 lakh each with two solvent sureties each for
the like amount. The other conditions imposed by the bench included that
the accused deposit their passports with the special court without
whose permission they shall not leave Kerala, they shall not contact the
witnesses or tamper with the evidence, they shall not commit any
offence while on bail and they shall appear before the local station
house officer on every Sunday between 10 am and 11 am.
Besides Suresh, the court granted the relief to seven others –
Mohammed Shafi P., Jalal A.M., Rabins Hameed, Ramees K.T., Sharafudeen
K.T., Sarith P.S. and Mohammed Ali – in the case. Advocate Sooraj T.
Elenjickal, who represented Suresh, said with the grant of bail in the
NIA case, she can come out of judicial custody as her preventive
detention under the COFEPOSA (Conservation of Foreign Exchange and
Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act) had been recently set aside by
the high court.
This may not be true for the other accused in the gold smuggling
case, the lawyer said. The NIA, Enforcement Directorate and Customs
conducted separate investigations into the racket that was busted with
the seizure of gold worth Rs 15 crore from the diplomatic baggage of the
UAE Consulate at Thiruvananthapuram airport on July 5, 2020. Several
people including Sivasankar, the former principal secretary to the
Kerala chief minister, former employees of the UAE consulate, Suresh and
Sarith P.S., were arrested in connection with the case.
NIA had earlier, while opposing their bail pleas, told the high court
that Suresh and others committed a terrorist act by smuggling 167 kg of
gold into India from UAE between November 2019 to June 2020 as they
knew that doing so would threaten the security and economic stability of
the country.
The
agency had also told the high court that Suresh and others, involved in
the smuggling of gold through diplomatic channels, were also aware that
their actions would damage India’s relations with UAE and therefore,
the offences under the UAPA for terrorist act, conspiracy and being part
of a terror organisation are made out.
(PTI)
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(With input from news agency language)
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