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October 16, 2025 5:32 PM IST

BHARATPOL | extradition | fugitives | Extradition of Fugitives | Amit Shah | Home Minister | MHA | Ministry of Home Affairs

Amit Shah calls for time-bound action to bring fugitives hiding abroad back to India

Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Thursday called for a ruthless and time-bound approach to bring back fugitives hiding abroad and ensure that India’s criminal justice system reaches offenders wherever they are in the world.

Speaking at the two-day national conference on ‘Extradition of Fugitives: Challenges and Strategies’, Shah said India must not only maintain zero tolerance against corruption, crime, and terrorism within the country but also extend it to those who “operate from across the borders to harm India’s sovereignty and economy.”

The Minister noted that when he first proposed this idea, he did not have a detailed roadmap, but the Ministry of Home Affairs and the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) had developed it effectively, leading to the launch of this important workshop.

“India today is moving ahead with confidence on the global stage. Along with ensuring border security, we must also strengthen the rule of law within and beyond our borders,” Shah said. He stressed the need for a structured national mechanism to track fugitives, coordinate among agencies, and streamline extradition.

Shah added that for too long there had been a “vacuum” in terms of organized and coordinated efforts to bring offenders back to face trial. He lauded the CBI’s Global Operations Centre, which coordinates in real time with police forces worldwide, and highlighted that since the launch of the BharatPol portal in January 2025, the CBI has issued over 190 notices—the highest ever in such a short period.

Under Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s leadership, Shah said, India has implemented legal and structural reforms such as the Fugitive Economic Offenders Act, 2018, which empowered the government to seize properties of economic offenders, resulting in recoveries of over USD 2 billion within four years. Between 2014 and 2023, assets worth around USD 12 billion were attached under various laws.

The Home Minister outlined five core goals to strengthen India’s extradition and justice system: ensuring justice is accessible beyond borders, enhancing national security through early identification of threats, modernizing identification systems for precision and accuracy, strengthening international trust in India’s judiciary and law enforcement, and protecting India’s economic system while building global cooperation.

He suggested establishing a dedicated extradition unit under the CBI’s guidance, creating a national database of fugitives detailing their networks and extradition status, and forming specialized expert cells to handle international treaties and extradition cases. Shah also recommended building detention facilities that comply with international human rights standards to counter humanitarian objections raised abroad, and implementing technology-based systems to revoke or blacklist passports as soon as a Red Corner Notice is issued. He further suggested launching a special drive to convert Blue Notices into Red Notices to expedite international action.

Shah emphasized that extradition efforts require both strategic diplomacy and strong domestic coordination, adding that “fugitives must not feel assured that India’s law cannot reach them.” He said those who commit crimes in India and flee abroad are not just escaping justice—they are threatening the country’s economy, sovereignty, and security. “This structured, coordinated approach marks a decisive new beginning,” he added.

 

Last updated on: 17th Oct 2025