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Was Rahul Gandhi detained by FBI?
By Our Special Correspondent
NEW DELHI, SEPT. 29. With the U.S. security agencies leaving
nothing to chance after the September 11 terrorist strikes,
sleuths of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) ``detained''
Mr. Rahul Gandhi, son of the former Prime Minister, Rajiv Gandhi,
and the Leader of the Opposition, Ms. Sonia Gandhi, for about an
hour at the Boston airport early this week, sources here said.
According to sources, Mr. Gandhi, reportedly travelling from
Boston to Washington, was detained by the FBI agents who would
not let him go even after checking his travel documents
thoroughly. They checked his baggage, despite being told that he
was the son of a former Indian Prime Minister.
Sources here maintain that only when the news reached 10,
Janpath, and the Congress president, Ms. Sonia Gandhi, reportedly
spoke to the Indian Ambassador in the U.S., Mr. Lalit Mansingh,
Mr. Gandhi was able to proceed with his onward journey.
Though official circles were silent over the incident, Congress
sources said they were concerned. Mr. Gandhi's movement should
have been known to the U.S. security agencies because he is a
Special Protection Group protectee. And, under the security
drill, any movement of a SPG protectee abroad is communicated in
advance to their counterparts in that country.
`Envoy did not intercede'
Meanwhile, Sridhar Krishnaswami reports from Washington, quoting
well-placed diplomatic sources, that media reports of Mr.
Mansingh having been brought into the picture to allow Mr. Gandhi
to proceed on his onward journey from Boston to Washington ``are
simply not true.''
The sources also said since Mr. Gandhi did not get any security
protection here, the U.S. agencies were not under any obligation
to inform the Indian Embassy of any contact they may have had
with him.
In fact, some Embassy officials here have no knowledge of Mr.
Gandhi's trip from Boston to Washington. ``But reports of Ms.
Sonia Gandhi calling the Indian Ambassador and asking him to
intercede with authorities on the `detention' of Mr. Rahul Gandhi
are simply not true,'' a senior Indian diplomat told The Hindu.
Diplomats are pointing to the heightened security precautions in
the U.S. in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks. Besides
different layers of security check at airports, many are
subjected to some intense questioning by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation and other investigative agencies. But for official
purposes, in the case of the movement of VVIPs - and in some
cases VIPs - the Embassy notifies Diplomatic Security for
necessary courtesies.
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