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Italian Marine Massimiliano Latorre Allowed To Stay In Italy

The apex court said all the conditions, which were imposed on the other marine, Salvatore Girone, would be applicable on Latorre as well.
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NEW DELHI -- The Supreme Court today allowed Massimiliano Latorre, the second Italian marine accused of killing two Indian fishermen off the Kerala coast in 2012, to remain in his country till the international arbitral tribunal decided the jurisdictional issue.

The apex court said all the conditions, which were imposed on the other marine, Salvatore Girone, would be applicable on Latorre as well.

A bench headed by Justice A R Dave added another condition on the union government to submit to the apex court a report every three months about the progress of case at the international arbitral tribunal, which would take a decision on which country had the right to try the case.

The bench, also comprising Justices Kurian Joseph and Amitava Roy, passed the order after the Centre placed before it a written affidavit, saying it had no objection to Latorre's plea, provided the same conditions were imposed on him as was done in the case of the other marine.

During the brief hearing, senior advocate K N Balagopal, appearing for Kerala government, raised some objections on the plea.

Senior advocate Rana Mukharjee, appearing for the victims' family, said it was unlikely that the matter would conclude before the tribunal by 2018 or 2020 and claimed that the game plan was to drag the case.

The court's direction came on a fresh plea by Italy seeking modification of bail conditions of Latorre to enable him remain in that country till the jurisdictional issue is decided by the international tribunal.

The apex court on 8 September had decided to hear Italy's plea on behalf of Latorre who had sought urgent hearing on the ground that an earlier court order was valid till 30 September this year.

While relaxing Girone's bail conditions on 26 May, the apex court had allowed him to go to his country till the jurisdictional issue was decided.

The apex court had imposed four conditions on Girone including that he has to report to a police station in Italy on first Wednesday of each month and the Italian authorities have to inform the Indian Embassy in Rome about it.

The second condition was that he will not tamper with any evidence, nor influence any witness in the case.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.