"Quattrochi is a different case. Quattrochi was not a case of any sovereign guarantee given by any government. He was an individual, who went away and did not come back or report to the the authority. This (in the Italian marines case) is a guarantee given by a sovereign government to us," party spokesperson Sandeep Dikshit said at the AICC briefing.
Dikshit said the Congress supports the stand taken by the government on the issue of Italian marines, particularly the "strong" stand that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has come out with in both Houses of Parliament.
"We hope that following the very strong sentiments of the Prime Minister, the issue will be sorted out. This is a very clear case where the Italian government through their ambassador gave an explicit guarantee to the Supreme Court and the government of India.
Asked about options before the government in case Italy refuses to comply with its persistence to send back the two marines, he said that there are no "physical means" for it to enforce if an independent government goes back on its words.
"But there are other ways available and the Prime Minister has said that strong steps will be taken in case the Italian government does not do what they have committed to the Supreme Court," Dikshit said.