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Indian student Puneet Puneet, 19 (Read 402 times)
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Indian student Puneet Puneet, 19
Aug 22nd, 2009 at 7:56am
 
How typical come to Australia take us for granted kill one of us and run away, this is not uncommon at least he wont want to come back, every time an immigrant gets in trouble here the first thing they do is flee, If only we did not let them in in the first place, and indians say we are bad, i thhink they should all piss off back where they came from and get an education in punjab, here is the story by By Samantha Donovan
After the recent controversies surrounding the treatment of Indian students in Australia, the relationship between the two countries may be about to face another test.
An Indian student has allegedly fled the country before being sentenced for culpable driving which killed one young Queenslander and seriously injured another.

Gold Coast student Dean Hofstee, 19, was killed in Melbourne last October. A speeding car slammed into him and his friend Clancy Coker outside a city hotel.

Indian student Puneet Puneet, 19, later pleaded guilty to a charge of culpable driving.

Police estimated the learner driver had been travelling at 150 kilometres per hour in a 60kph zone. His blood alcohol reading was 0.165.

Outside the County Court in Melbourne yesterday, Mr Hofstee's father, Peter Hofstee, said he was bitterly disappointed that Puneet appeared to have fled the country before his pre-sentencing hearing.

"It would be important for Dean to see that justice is done. I certainly hope that the authorities manage to extradite him [Puneet] back to Australia to face the charges and finalise the matter," he said.

Judge Lisa Hannan issued an arrest warrant for Puneet.

Victoria Police believe he fled to New Delhi using the passport of another Indian student on June 12, just a few hours after reporting for bail.


Extradition a tricky process

Australia and India agreed to an extradition treaty in June last year but the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade says it is not yet in force.

A professor of international law at the Australian National University, Don Rothwell, says the arrest warrant issued in Melbourne cannot be executed in India until the treaty comes into force.

"For the time being, providing that the Indian fugitive remains in India, he would effectively be exempt from the reach of the arrest warrant, providing he stays in India," Professor Rothwell said.

"Once the extradition treaty enters into force, Indian authorities would be bound to uphold and process the extradition request, and to seek to lodge an arrest warrant within India to seek out and detain this individual."

Professor Rothwell says he does not think this case will delay the treaty.

"In 2008 in addition to the extradition treaty, Australia also concluded a mutual assistance treaty dealing with matters of criminal interest between the two countries, and since then of course we've had the terrorist events in Bombay and no doubt the Australian Federal Police have got interests in matters that are occurring in India," he said.

"I think the Australian Government, perhaps even the Indian Government, has made clear that they're going to differentiate the recent troubles about Indian student concerns in Australia from other important aspects of bilateral relationships.

"So it would be hoped I think, and perhaps even expected, certainly in Canberra, that this would not be an issue which would delay the eventual entry into force of this extradition treaty."

Late yesterday, Victoria Police charged a 20-year-old Indian student living in Melbourne.

They allege Sukhcharanjit Singh gave his passport to Puneet. Singh appeared in court and has been remanded in custody.

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