Citing a statement by the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA), Bonino said the Indian government has made it clear that Italian marines -- Massimiliano Latorre and Salvatore Girone -- will not face the death penalty over the killings.
"There was a formal statement (Thursday) by Foreign Ministry Spokesman Syed Akbaruddin who answered an ANSA question and recalled that Foreign Minister Salman Kurshid ruled out the death penalty," Bonino was quoted as saying by the ANSA news agency.
"It explains clearly what is the Government of India's position. If your argument is that there may be some developments where x, y, z may have felt something at this stage, I can assure you the Government of India intends to abide by those statements that were made on the floor of the House in Parliament, and any decision that we take will be a considered one taking into account the policy framework that has been articulated in that statement to Parliament," the MEA Spokesperson had added.
More From This Section
The remarks by the Italian Minister came in the backdrop of media reports in India which said investigators from National Investigation Agency (NIA) had asked the judge to punish the Marines on the basis of the 'Sua Act' which entails death penalty.
"The death penalty is not even conceivable as a risk," Italy's special envoy on the case, Staffan de Mistura, said.