logo
British academic Nitasha Kaul says her OCI registration cancelled

British academic Nitasha Kaul says her OCI registration cancelled

The Hindu19-05-2025

British academic Nitasha Kaul said on Monday (May 19, 2025) that the Indian government has cancelled her Overseas Citizen of India (OCI) registration for indulging in 'anti-India activities' through 'writing, speeches and journalistic activities at various international forums and social media platforms'.
She said that she will pursue legal remedies and will challenge the cancellation in court.
Ms. Kaul, a British Kashmiri professor of Politics and International Relations at London's University of Westminster, was denied entry into India on February 25, 2024 when she was invited by the Karnataka government to participate in an event.
A few months after she was deported to the U.K., in May 2024 she received a show-cause notice as to why her OCI registration should not be cancelled.
'I responded to the show-cause notice within 15-days with a 20,000 word letter. The show-cause notice made broad-based wide-ranging allegations, the same as the cancellation notice. It did not point to anything specific,' Ms. Kaul told The Hindu.
She said she was being targeted to intimidate others like her into silence.
'India is not China. This kind of action is devoid of any rationalisation. My mother is in India, I am not anti-India, I have always condemned violent action... be it by Lashkar-e-Taiba [LeT] or the Hamas,' she said.
The notice cancelling Ms. Kaul's OCI registration said, 'It has been brought to the notice of the Government of India that you have been found indulging in anti-India activities, motivated by malice and complete disregard for facts or history. Through your numerous inimical writings, speeches and journalistic activities at various international forums and on social media platforms, you regularly target India and its institutions on the matters of India's sovereignty...'
Ms. Kaul said that she was informed through the notice that her reply sent last year was not found satisfactory.
OCIs are of Indian origin but hold foreign passports. India does not allow dual citizenship but provides certain benefits under Section 7B(I) of the Citizenship Act, 1955 to the OCIs.
As on January 31, 2022, 40.68 lakh OCI registration cards had been issued.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Live updates: top news of the day, June 11, 2025
Live updates: top news of the day, June 11, 2025

The Hindu

timean hour ago

  • The Hindu

Live updates: top news of the day, June 11, 2025

SpaceX has said that it is standing down from Falcon 9's launch of Axiom Space Ax-4 mission which will carry Indian astronaut Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla's to the International Space Station. It was originally scheduled to be launched on June 10, which was postponed to today owing to unfavourable weather conditions. Meanwhile, India and the U.S. teams discussed issues pertaining to market access, digital trade, and customs facilitation during the week-long deliberations on the proposed bilateral trade agreement, an official said. Prime Minister Narendra Modi hosted members of the multiparty delegations, part of India's diplomatic outreach in various capitals across the world following Operation Sindoor, at his official residence on Tuesday (June 10, 2025), telling them that the delegation by their very make up and strong advocacy reinforced India's message of unity in fighting terror.

Will strike deep into Pakistan if provoked by terror attacks: EAM
Will strike deep into Pakistan if provoked by terror attacks: EAM

Hans India

timean hour ago

  • Hans India

Will strike deep into Pakistan if provoked by terror attacks: EAM

New Delhi: India will strike deep into Pakistan if provoked by terrorist attacks, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar has warned, asserting that there will be retribution against the terrorist outfits and their leaders in case of barbaric acts like the Pahalgam attack. Jaishankar, who is travelling to Europe a month after India launched Operation Sindoor in response to the Pahalgam terror attack, also said that Pakistan was training "thousands" of terrorists "in the open" and "unleashing" them on India. "We are not going to live with it." "So our message to them is that if you continue to do the kind of barbaric acts which they did in April, then there is going to be retribution, and that retribution will be against the terrorist organisations and the terrorist leadership," he said. "We don't care where they are. If they are deep in Pakistan, we will go deep into Pakistan," he added. Tensions between India and Pakistan escalated after the Pahalgam terror attack on April 22 which claimed 26 lives. India carried out precision strikes on terror infrastructure in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir on May 7. The on-ground hostilities from the Indian and Pakistan sides that lasted for four days ended with an understanding of stopping the military actions following talks between the directors general of military operations of both sides on May 10. Jaishankar warned that the root causes of the conflict remain unchanged. "It (Pakistan) is a country very steeped in its use of terrorism as an instrument of state policy. That is the whole issue," he said. When asked if the conditions that led to the outbreak of war last month were still in place, he said: "If you call the commitment to terrorism a source of tension, absolutely, it is." When asked about losses, Jaishankar said the relevant authorities would address the matter at the right time. He said that India's fighter aircraft and missiles had inflicted far more extensive damage on the Pakistani Air Force than vice versa, forcing Pakistan to beg for peace. "As far I'm concerned, how effective the Rafale was or frankly, how effective other systems were - to me the proof of the pudding are the destroyed and disabled airfields on the Pakistani side," he said.

C Raja Mohan writes: Trump-era volatility has drawn India and Europe closer
C Raja Mohan writes: Trump-era volatility has drawn India and Europe closer

Indian Express

timean hour ago

  • Indian Express

C Raja Mohan writes: Trump-era volatility has drawn India and Europe closer

External Affairs Minister Subrah-manyam Jaishankar's visit to Europe this week and Prime Minister Narendra Modi's travel to Canada for the G7 summit present an opportunity to engage with the growing divergence within the West in the Trump era. Modi is also visiting Cyprus and Croatia, highlighting India's growing interest in Mediterranean Europe. Delhi's new focus on Europe acknowledges the old continent's emerging role as a potential swing state in the shifting dynamic among major powers — the US, Russia, and China. Equally significant are the new possibilities for deeper India-Europe strategic cooperation. Jaishankar's visit aims to accelerate strategic dialogue with the EU while reinforcing the longstanding partnership with France and strengthening ties with Belgium. Modi's G7 summit attendance goes beyond resetting troubled bilateral ties with Canada — it offers a chance to recalibrate relations with a Western world experiencing a rare upheaval. The G7 has long been the voice of the collective West, establishing norms for global economic governance, security, and political values. This elite club of industrial democracies — the US, Canada, the UK, Germany, France, Italy, and Japan — has arguably been far more consequential than the UNSC. The 2025 summit convenes amid deepening divisions within the G7. Since the last summit hosted by Canada in 2018, when his European colleagues confronted a defiant Donald Trump, these divisions have intensified. Unlike his predecessor Joe Biden, who emphasised alliances and partnerships, Trump views allies as 'free riders' who benefit from US security commitments but do not pay their fair share of the West's collective defence burden. He also believes allies have exploited America through unfair trade practices. India needs to put Trump's equivocation in its recent conflict with Pakistan in perspective. Trump dismisses NATO — which America established in 1949 after spending much blood and treasure in the World Wars — and shows little regard for the Five Eyes, the historically close-knit Anglo-American alliance that predates NATO. His suggestion that Canada become a US state exemplifies how he has belittled Western unity and challenged long-held alliances. It should not be a surprise if he sets aside the precedent for Washington's de-hyphenation of Delhi and Islamabad. Trump's return to the White House has thrown the G7 into disarray. While the US remains central to the group, its leadership of the West has come under a cloud. Trump's reluctance to defend Ukraine's sovereignty and eagerness to deal with Russian leader Vladimir Putin have alarmed European allies — particularly Germany, France, and the UK — creating a fundamental rift within the G7. As the summit host in 2025, Canada has assumed a broader diplomatic role following its unresolved political tensions with Trump. Ottawa must now reconsider its strategic calculations, historically tied to the US. Prime Minister Mark Carney's invitation to Modi is part of a new effort to diversify Canada's international relations. So is his courtship of Europe. Ottawa is negotiating a landmark defence agreement with the EU to reduce its dependence on US security guarantees. Through the EU's Readiness 2030 initiative and advocacy for joint critical mineral strategies, Canada is developing a transatlantic identity more aligned with Europe than ever. Under Keir Starmer, the UK — once the champion of transatlanticism — is reorienting toward Europe. While Brexit aimed to revitalise the Anglosphere, the 2025 UK-EU defence pact acknowledges Europe's strategic importance for Britain. Under Friedrich Merz, Germany has ended decades of strategic passivity. Constitutional debt brake reforms now enable massive defence and infrastructure investment, positioning Germany for European security leadership. Berlin's dual strategy — reaffirming NATO commitments while advocating European strategic autonomy — demonstrates both realism and ambition. Emmanuel Macron's well-known promotion of European 'strategic autonomy' has acquired a new edge in Trump's second presidency. France is offering to extend its nuclear umbrella over European partners and wants to expand Europe's defence capabilities in partnership with Germany. Recovering from the Trump shock and the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the UK, France, and Germany have intensified security collaboration. A rising Poland is now among Europe's leading powers. The Weimar Triangle of France, Germany and Poland is emerging as a powerful force in central Europe. Even as they take greater responsibility for European security, Britain, France, Germany, and Poland seek an expanded presence in Asia and the Indo-Pacific. Japan, the G7's sole Asian member, has long advocated for European engagement in Asian security amid China's assertiveness. Despite its ambivalence toward China, Europe is spreading its bets with deeper ties to ASEAN, Australia, India, Japan, and South Korea. The India-Europe relationship has begun to move from the margins to the centre of major-power relations for both Delhi and Brussels. Europe's push for strategic autonomy aligns with India's worldview. The once-improbable India-Europe Free Trade Agreement now looks within reach. The proposed India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor aims to reshape Eurasian connectivity and secure alternative supply chains amid the US-China rivalry. The EU-India Trade and Technology Council (TTC), established in 2023, advances cooperation in AI, quantum computing, outer space, and green technologies. Europe's ReArm Plan (2025), targeting €800 billion for defence modernisation by 2030, creates opportunities for security collaboration with India. India's participation in EU defence mechanisms marks a shift from transactional arms deals to co-development. For Europe, India has become an important part of its economic and military diversification strategy. For Delhi, Europe offers a much-needed depth to India's great-power relations. Together, they can enhance the prospects for a multipolar global order amid increasing signs of a bipolar domination by the US and China. India and Europe also have their task cut out as America turns inwards and unpredictable. The writer is a distinguished fellow at the Council for Strategic and Defence Research and a contributing editor on international affairs for The Indian Express

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store