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Updated Jul 15, 2026 · 19:25
India News Updated Jul 15, 2026

UK Takes India’s Concerns Seriously on Extradition of Financial Fugitives

UK officials confirmed they take India’s concerns on extraditing financial fugitives seriously. The India-UK Free Trade Agreement was credited to Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal’s negotiating team. No fixed first-year target was set, but long-term bilateral trade is expected to increase by over 25 billion pounds annually. The EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism was clarified as a separate issue from the FTA.

"Take each other's concerns seriously": UK officials on extradition of financial fugitives to India

New Delhi, July 15

British officials on Wednesday said India and the UK take each other's concerns on the extradition of financial fugitives "seriously".

On the sensitive issue of the extradition of financial fugitives to India, UK officials said London remains mindful of New Delhi's position. The UK officials said, "We take each other's concerns seriously."

Meanwhile, the British officials also spoke about the recently concluded India-UK Free Trade Agreement and credited India's negotiating team, led by Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal, for its successful conclusion, even as they admitted the talks were an "emotional roller coaster ride."

Elaborating upon the economic impact of the trade pact, officials said no fixed target had been set for the first year but expressed confidence in long-term gains. "We don't have a specific target for the first year, but in the long run, we're expecting bilateral trade to increase by over 25 billion pounds a year. So it's really big for us, and that's from a base where it's worth 48 billion already. We've already seen it grow by 4 billion pounds per year, in anticipation of this deal," the official said.

On the European Union's Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), officials clarified that it remained a distinct matter from the FTA. "CBAM is a separate issue. It's an issue of helping UK industries decarbonise and setting them incentives for that. We have heard the ending position, and we're respectful of that," the official said.

The India-UK FTA, described by officials on both sides as one of the most significant trade pacts in recent years, is expected to substantially deepen economic ties between the two nations.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Sneha F

The FTA is good news, but let's be real - the extradition process is still painfully slow. The UK says they take us seriously, but we've seen how legal loopholes get exploited. Need concrete timelines, not just words.

Ravi K

Emotional roller coaster indeed! These trade negotiations are never easy. Piyush Goyal ji did well to hold the line. But I worry about UK's carbon border tax - could hurt our exports if not handled carefully.

David E

As someone who works in international trade, this FTA is huge. The 25 billion pound potential is no joke. But the extradition issue remains a sticking point - both sides need to find a way to balance legal standards with justice.

Priya S

Finally some movement on extradition! But I'm skeptical - UK courts have rejected our requests before citing human rights concerns. Need to strengthen our own legal system first so there's no excuse for delay. Also, the FTA benefits should trickle down to small businesses, not just big corporates.

Michael C

The trade deal sounds promising, but 25 billion pounds is ambitious. Let's see if the groundwork is actually there. And on CBAM - India should push back hard. We can't let carbon taxes become a new form of trade barrier for developing nations.

Vikram

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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