THE lawyer representing the Scotsman held in “arbitrary detention” in India since 2017 is on a phone-hacking list, according to a report from the country.

Advocate Jaspal Singh Manjhpur acts for Jagtar Singh Johal, who has accused Indian authorities of torturing him to extract a false confession related to the funding of an assassination plot.

MPs say the treatment of the fitness fan, a Sikh blogger who was in India to get married, amounts to arbitrary detention – but the UK Government hasn’t adopted that definition.

Johal, known as Jaggi, maintains his innocence and his representatives have accused the judicial system of deliberately drawing out his detention through repeated court delays.

Now Indian publication The Wire has reported that Manjhpur’s name appears on a leaked list of thousands of numbers analysed by the Pegasus Project, an investigative team involving more than 80 journalists from 17 news organisations in 10 countries and backed by Amnesty International’s Security Lab.

Manjhpur was, it is claimed, chosen as a possible candidate for surveillance in 2018 using military-grade spyware developed by Israel’s NSO Group.

The system is licensed to tackle serious and organised crime and terrorism and the year coincides with Manjhpur’s involvement in the Scot’s case. In August 2018, shortly after his name was added to the list, he came to Scotland to meet Johal’s family.

Martin Docherty-Hughes, their MP, has called the development “deeply troubling”, adding: “We should not be surprised by these allegations.”

Manjhpur, a human rights advocate, told The Wire: “I know that I’m a person of interest for the Union government. I’ve always been.”

Johal is accused of giving £3000 to a plot to kill eight people from 2016-17.

His family believes his arrest and detention is related to his blogging on the site Never Forget 84, which is dedicated to the anti-Sikh pogroms that took place that year in India.

In a document circulated to UK MPs in June, Indian authorities claimed he’s never raised torture claims with a judge, has tried to “subvert the judicial process” from his cell and is trying to trick Scots into supporting him.