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Centre wants NIA powers widened

In a move aimed at giving more powers to the country’s key anti-terror unit, the National Investigation Agency, the home ministry has issued a Cabinet note that it be given powers to allow plea bargai

In a move aimed at giving more powers to the country’s key anti-terror unit, the National Investigation Agency, the home ministry has issued a Cabinet note that it be given powers to allow plea bargains to convert death sentences into life imprisonment for convicts willing to reveal crucial information in terror cases.

“The ultimate decision on a plea bargain has to be taken by the court. But the investigative agency can be given powers to let the special public prosecutor approach the court with the request for a plea bargain. This can be extremely effective in terror attack cases where the prime suspects can help the NIA provide crucial information on the conspiracy and other modules,” a top MHA official said.

The plea bargain proposal, sources said, has been under consideration for a while now, and there is a view in the MHA that if handled with care plea bargains can be an “extremely effective tool” to get information on terror activities.

The NIA had told the home ministry that it needed a “more focused approach” to get prior information on terror attacks being planned against India.

The plea bargain system had worked effectively in the US in the case of David Coleman Headley, an accused in the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks, who recently gave some important information while being cross-examined through video conferencing from a US prison. Headley had also confirmed that Ishrat Jahan was a Lashkar-e-Tayyaba operative.

If the home ministry plan is accepted, it can be used in future cases like that of Yakub Memon, who was hanged for his role in the 1993 Mumbai serial blasts.

The Cabinet note says the NIA should be given powers to infiltrate terror groups like ISIS and those operating from Pakistani soil and targeting India. There has been a rising threat to India from ISIS in the past few months.

“All intelligence agencies have their moles or informers within terror outfits. The NIA wants more powers to let them infiltrate these terror groups by planting their own informers,” the official added.

The role of intelligence gathering through this mode is largely restricted to the Research and Analysis Wing as well as the Intelligence Bureau,” the official added.

The MHA also wants the Union Cabinet to give the NIA more powers to investigate attacks on Indian assets in other countries, particularly attacks on embassies and consulates. NIA officials feel most of these attacks are carried out by terror groups that are active in India too, so the investigations can provide addition information about subversive activities within the country.

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