Ragesh Gopakumar with Rajya Sabha MP Prakash Javadekar, and K Suredran, State BJP President post the former’s arrival in India
Ragesh Gopakumar, one of the eight ex-Indian Navy personnel recently released by Qatar, expressed gratitude for their freedom and credited their survival in prison to their defence training. Gopakumar, who retired from the Navy in 2017, thanked Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the Indian government for their release. He highlighted the ordeal of their families during their captivity and praised PM Modi for personally intervening to secure their release. The group had been sentenced to death by a Qatari court, a decision later commuted to varying jail terms.
“We are just happy to be alive… happy to be home,” a relieved Gopakumar told PTI.
“Prison and confinement is something terrible,” he said, adding he and his colleagues survived only because of the training they underwent as Defence forces.
He along with seven other former Navy personnel returned on Monday, nearly three-and-a-half months after a Qatari court handed them death sentence that was subsequently commuted to varying jail terms.
Gopakumar, who served as a Petty Officer in the Navy, said he had retired in 2017 and later joined the Oman Defence training company as a communications instructor.
He resides in Balaramapuram, a suburb located over 16 km away from Kerala’s capital city.
Whenever someone enquired what the plight of his family had been when he was in prison, he would ask them to imagine a situation where a husband who used to speak to his wife at least five times a day suddenly stopped calling her.
The former Navy veteran attributed his release to his family’s prayers and the efforts of the Union government.
Lavishing praises on Prime Minister Modi, he said it was only because of his personal intervention that their release was made possible.
Gopakumar said all of them were hopeful that they would step out of the prison “if Modiji intervened” but had no idea how long it would take.
He also expressed gratitude to the central government for having made arrangements to bring the families of the jailed ex-Naval officers to Qatar.
“If an Indian is in trouble abroad and is innocent… if our PM is convinced about it, he will come to their rescue even if it is just one person… every Indian should know this,” he said.
The eight Indian Navy personnel faced charges of espionage but neither the Qatari authorities nor New Delhi had made the allegations levelled against them public.
On October 26, they were sentenced to death by Qatar’s Court of First Instance.
On December 28, the Court of Appeal in the Gulf nation commuted the capital punishment and sentenced them to jail terms for durations ranging from three years to 25 years.
The Court of Appeal had given 60 days to appeal against the prison terms.
In December last year, PM Modi met Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani on the sidelines of the COP28 Summit in Dubai and discussed the well-being of Indians there.
It is learnt that National Security Adviser Ajit Doval played a role in the negotiations with the Qatari authorities in securing the release of the Indians.
This report is auto-generated from a syndicated feed
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