English to Malayalam Dictionary extraditable

extraditable

extraditable
definition
adjective
possession of explosives will be an extraditable offense
(of a crime) making a criminal liable to extradition.
example
The police will be given extra powers to detain those suspected of 'extraditable' offences.
Singapore has requested that the two countries must first agree on the list of 'extraditable' crimes, including terrorism-related offenses, for such a treaty to be signed.
This requires that an 'extraditable' offence must also be a crime in the UK.
But the legal proceedings could drag on for years, and since desertion is not an 'extraditable' offense, his clients are safe for some time.
Ecuadoran citizens are not 'extraditable' and that would cause a lot of problems if they were not present for the hearing and the trial.
On the other hand, if he is not entitled to state immunity then he is 'extraditable' .
Since I was never required to allow a fellow citizen to die with the dignity she expressly hoped for, I figure whatever I may have done won't be thought 'extraditable' .
No enquiries seem to have been made as to whether those offences were 'extraditable' in English law.
It simply has to demonstrate that its allegations correspond to an 'extraditable' offence.
The House of Lords was considering whether a person was ‘accused’ of an 'extraditable' offence within section 1 of the Extradition Act 1989.
Suspicion of homicide, unlike people smuggling, is 'extraditable' in both countries now.
Only Ireland and Italy stand in the way of adopting 30 'extraditable' crimes.
After being held for approximately 2 weeks in immigration detention, the warrants for my arrest in respect of the alleged 'extraditable' offences were issued.
The protocol also demands that corruption should be made an 'extraditable' offence in the quest to link arms with member states.
The law lords have already ruled that the crimes are 'extraditable' under both Spanish and British law.
For example, torture is deemed an 'extraditable' crime under Article 13 of the Inter-American Convention to Prevent and Punish Torture.
Because he was found guilty but insane, he was not 'extraditable' to this country, a justice spokesman said.
He came to the conclusion that offences of this kind might be 'extraditable' if they took place in countries to which the Suppression of Terrorism Act 1978 applies, after the date on which that Act came into force.
British Law Officers Are Reported to Have Decided He Is 'Extraditable' .
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