Indian driver gets Australian extradition

Indian man Puneet Puneet - who hit and killed a Melbourne teen in a 2008 road accident - will find out next week if he will be extradited to Australia.

Indian national Puneet Puneet

An Indian man who killed a Melbourne teen in 2008 will find out if he will be extradited next week. (AAP)

An Indian man who fled Australia after killing a teenager while drink driving and speeding in Melbourne has been sent to prison as a court set his extradition hearing for next week.

Puneet Puneet, 24, was handcuffed and led away to New Delhi's Tihar jail amid emotional scenes where his family members pleaded for sympathy for their only son.

Puneet, sporting a black winter cap and a black jacket, said he could not understand why he was being handcuffed. "I am not a terrorist. I am ready to abide by the law."

Puneet, who only had a learner driver's licence at the time of the crash, hit two students, aged 19 and 20, as they walked across a road in Melbourne in 2008. One of the students died at the scene.

Australian police estimated Puneet was driving at 148 kilometres an hour in a 60 km/h zone.

He also blew 0.165 on an alcohol breath test, over triple the legal limit.

Puneet pleaded guilty to culpable driving and negligently causing serious injury, then bailed on strict conditions including the surrender of his passport. But he later fled the country back to India using a fellow Indian's passport.

Australian police offered a reward in 2012 for information leading to his arrest. After four years on the run from police in India, he was nabbed in late November in Noida, a satellite city of Delhi.

While Australian authorities are now seeking extradition, Puneet's lawyer Meena Sharma said she had moved an application for his trial be held in India.

"We are saying that since Puneet is an Indian citizen, he should be tried in India," she told reporters outside the court.

Earlier, judge Sheetal Chaudhary said she would hear arguments on Puneet's extradition next Wednesday.

"Fugitive Puneet be sent to judicial custody in Tihar jail till then," she said.

A member of the Australian Federal Police was present in the court as the judge read out her order.


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Source: AAP


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