Devyani Khobragade row: India targets US nationals (Read More:BBC)
India is checking the tax statuses of Americans working at schools in
the country, after the arrest this month of an Indian diplomat in New
York.
Her detention on charges of visa fraud and underpayment of her housekeeper sparked outrage in India.
India would no longer turn a blind eye to tax violations by diplomats' spouses taking up work in the country, Reuters cited an unnamed official as saying.
Delhi has also withdrawn some privileges enjoyed by American diplomats and their families in the country, added the official.
The US embassy declined to comment on the latest steps.
While US Secretary of State John Kerry has expressed his "regret" over Ms Khobragade's arrest, the state department has said it will not drop charges, as requested by India.
Delhi has also demanded an apology from the US over the diplomat's alleged "humiliation".
India's deputy consul general in New York was arrested in the city on 12 December on suspicion of visa fraud and making false statements, after being accused of underpaying her Indian maid.
She was handcuffed and strip-searched after a complaint from the maid, Sangeeta Richard.
What is diplomatic immunity?
- A form of legal immunity that ensures diplomats are exempt from prosecution under the host country's laws
- Agreed as international law in the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations (1961)
- Under the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations (1963) a consul is afforded a variation of diplomatic immunity called consular immunity
- It guarantees immunity from the host country's laws only with respect to acts related to consular duties
- Who, What, Why: Does consul have immunity?
The diplomat, who has been
released on bail, denies all the charges and has in turn accused Ms
Richard of theft and attempted blackmail.
Delhi had already ordered a series of reprisals against the
US. Security barricades around the US embassy in the city were removed
and a visiting US delegation was snubbed by senior Indian politicians
and officials. According to documents filed in a New York court, Ms Khobragade wrote on a visa application that the maid would be paid $4,500 (£2,746) a month.
But investigators said she instead paid only $573 per month - less than the New York state minimum wage.
If found guilty, Ms Khobragade faces a maximum sentence of 10 years for visa fraud and five years for making false statements.
Source:BBC
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