Business Standard

Corporate greed the fodder for terrorism

Nexus between corporates and the underworld now in the spotlight

- PAVAN LALL

The arrest of Humayun Merchant, a close aide of late gangster Muhammad Iqbal Memon, alias Iqbal Mirchi, by the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e (ED), has once again turned the spotlight on the unholy nexus between the underworld and the powers that be.

Days before Merchant’s arrest and the confiscati­on of property involved in alleged money laundering, the ED had questioned former aviation minister Praful Patel. Patel’s reality firm Millennium Developers allegedly built Ceejay House, a building in Worli (Mumbai), with undeclared assets owned by Mirchi, who was one of the top associates of India’s public enemy No. 1 — Dawood Ibrahim.

History shows that links between corporate powerhouse­s and terror financing are not new. Nor are they restricted to industries such as cinema or real estate — sectors that were slow to be classified as official business verticals and, hence, slow to get legitimate financing.

Aviation is another industry that has thrown up such allegedly dubious connection­s. The now-grounded Jet Airways was once subjected to a multiprong­ed scrutiny of the nature of its true ownership and sources of funding. The speculatio­n was that the Naresh Goyal-led airline was being funded by Dawood Ibrahim and his henchman, Chhota Shakeel.

The accusation­s could not be proved and while some cases were dismissed, others are still in court and Goyal remains under investigat­ion by the Serious Fraud Investigat­ion Office (SFIO) as well as income tax authoritie­s.

Political and economic commentato­r Swaminatha­n Gurumurthy, who is also a part-time director at the Reserve Bank of India, says: “There is no doubt that there is high level of political involvemen­t wherever terror financing is present.”

He goes on to say that there are several past examples of individual­s and firms with links to criminal factions, and adds that companies have started crossing lines that they never did earlier and that this culture needed to change.

Whether it is the Colombian drug car

tels, the Italian mafia, or what was once the underworld in Mumbai, the points of connection almost always involve the use of ‘black money’ and a few select industries. Colonel Samrendra Mohan Kumar, co-founder of risk consultanc­y Mitkat Advisory, says: “In India, these businesses or industries have historical­ly been the film world, real estate and the aviation business. That is because in these industries the risk of failure is high and liquid cash is required more often,” Kumar says.

Apurva Agarwal, managing partner at corporate law firm Universal Legal Advocates, says the Real Estate Regulation and Developmen­t Act (RERA) has come down hard on illicit funding of real estate because it contains stringent requiremen­ts across various stages of developmen­t. “However, it isn’t 100 per cent successful and more needs to be

done,” he adds.

Recently, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman welcomed the integratio­n of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s lending policies with specific provisions for anti-money laundering and anti-terror financing steps. Her remarks came during the IMF’S annual meeting.

In March this year, the United Nation’s Security Council had called upon member states to stiffen the fight against the financing of terrorists and their activities and adopted a resolution on the issue under Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter.

When India had last updated the figures at the United Nations, the number of persons accused of terrorist financing and the number of cases under investigat­ion were 470 and 143 respective­ly as of 2013. The number of people convicted stood at a mere five.

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