Business Standard

Govt to hire UK arbitrator to bring back Vijay Mallya

Move follows poor track record of India in extraditin­g offenders from Britain

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY Mumbai, 19 April

The government is planning to get on board a UK based “independen­t arbitrator” to appear on behalf of Indian authoritie­s and put up a strong case of extraditio­n against absconding liquor baron Vijay Mallya, an Enforcemen­t Directorat­e (ED) official said.

The move comes in view of India’s past experience­s with extraditio­n cases and long-drawn legal processes.

Mallya was briefly arrested in London on Tuesday over accusation­s of fraud by Indian probe agencies and presented before the Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court for an extraditio­n hearing. He was released on bail a few hours later.

The 61-year-old businessma­n had fled India last year after banks started seeking his arrest over unpaid loans tied to his defunct Kingfisher Airlines.

“The person who will represent the case should be well-versed with the judicial system of the country where the matter will be heard. The court of law differs from country to country, so it is essential that the representa­tive knows the law and legal remedies of that country,” said the official cited above.

Sources said there were at least a dozen instances in the past when Indian agencies lost cases due to lack of understand­ing of the State laws.

Some officials said the chances of Mallya being extradited anytime soon were less than 30 per cent, considerin­g the “civil” nature of charges against him. He can seek relief on the grounds that he is not one among the “big loan defaulters”. Loan default cannot be a major factor to extradite any person, another official of the enforcemen­t agency said.

Failed extraditio­n attempts in the past can be attributed to lack of paperwork and strong evidence presented in court. However, in this case, the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) and the ED, which are probing the matter, are focusing on every minute detail.

CBI officials, along with a panel of senior lawyers, are said to be going to London with all evidence to build a watertight case against Mallya.

Despite this, Mallya have several legal options for appeal. “According to treaties between the two countries as well as the Britain’s Extraditio­n Act, there are certain clauses on which extraditio­n request can be dismissed,” said an ED lawyer.

The British court can refuse the extraditio­n if it is proven to be political, or a violation of human rights. The court can also ask why it took six to seven years for Indian agencies and banks to take action against him.

Sources said it would take at least 15-20 hearings for the primary court at Westminste­r to arrive at a conclusion and even if Mallya lost the case, he has the option of moving to higher courts in Britain itself.

It has learnt that ED has so far attached Mallya’s assets worth over ~6,000 crore under anti-money laundering laws.

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