India Accuses US Diplomatic As Standoff Continues
Indian officials claim that a number of American teachers
working at a US Embassy school have committed tax evasions and committed visa
fraud, the latest development in a growing diplomatic row that began with the
arrest of an Indian diplomat in New York.
The American Embassy School (AES) is a well-known school in
India that serves US diplomats’ children and the families of other English
speaking officials.
The school is located on US-owned land just next to the US
Embassy and has a swimming pool, athletic facilities, and tennis courts, among
other luxuries. Students must also be able to afford the annual $20,000
tuition, a fee that rivals the most prestigious schools in the US northeast.
Indian officials now claim that a handout the AES gives to
female teachers whose husbands are also employed by the AES is a violation of
Indian law.
“The female spouse should not state that she will be
working,” the document states, as quoted by the New York Times. It instructs
the women to list their occupation as “housewife” on visa applications while
being careful to note that “no sexism is intended on our part.”
Syed Akbaruddin, a spokesman for India’s Ministry of
External Affairs, told the Times that the directions were “clearly a violation
of tax law,” while another official speculated that as many as 16 teachers are
employed illegally.
This is the latest in a series of escalating provocations
since Indian diplomat Devyani Khobragade was arrested in New York City one
month ago. Khobragade was charged with visa fraud in connection to the wages
she claimed to be paying her housekeeper, Sangeeta Richard. Khobragade was
subjected to a cavity search, infuriating Indian officials and media
commentators.
Since then, Indian police have removed the security barrier
around the US Embassy and have begun citing American officials for minor
traffic violations. The US State Department released a statement Wednesday
indicating that William J. Burns, the deputy secretary of state, had hosted
Indian ambassador S. Jaishankar for a meeting, where the two discussed “the
variety of issues raised by the Ministry of External affairs via diplomatic
note, including alleged issues with the American Embassy School.”
A 1973 agreement between the two countries stipulates that
only a small number of American teachers are eligible for tax-free status and,
if that number is exceeded, those teachers who come later are not eligible for
tax exemption. The handout makes this condition clear by noting, “So if you are
a teaching couple we usually have the male spouse apply for the ‘employment’
visa and the female spouse be noted as ‘housewife’ on the visa application.”
They reported that approximately one-third of the 1,500
students at the AES are American, with 20 percent hailing from South Korea and
the rest coming from dozens of other countries. The paper goes on to note that
tax laws are enforced selectively and Indian officials have implied they will
begin investigating the legal status of American teachers located throughout
the country.
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