Bangladesh's interim government led by Muhammad Yunus said on Thursday that deposed prime minister Sheikh Hasina's reported extension of visa was unrelated to Dhaka's request for her extradition to stand trial.
We have sought India to return Sheikh Hasina as a Bangladeshi citizen. Her status in India is not relevant to this request. It is not a matter of our consideration," a foreign office spokesman said at a weekly media briefing on Tuesday.
Hasina, 77, has been staying in India since August 5 last year when she escaped Bangladesh after a huge student-led protest brought an end to her Awami League's (AL) 16-year rule.
Bangladesh's International Crimes Tribunal (ICT) has issued arrest warrants for Hasina and several former cabinet ministers, advisers, and military and civil officials for "crimes against humanity and genocide".
The interim government on Tuesday said it had revoked the passports of Hasina and 96 others over their alleged involvement in enforced disappearances and the July killings.
Spokesman Rafiqul Alam on Thursday said that Dhaka does not "have additional information, so we will not speculate" when he was sought for comments on media reports that New Delhi recently extended Hasina's visa while Bangladesh revoked her diplomatic passport.
But he said when a Bangladeshi citizen's passport is scrapped, the country concerned is informed through Bangladesh's missions and in such cases, a visa is no longer required.
Bangladesh last month officially sought Hasina's repatriation to stand trial on charges of mass killings during the Anti-Discrimination Student's Movement dubbed as July-August uprising that toppled her Awami League government on August 5. Hasina secretly left for India the same day.
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