Hindustan Times (Delhi)

ED freezes accounts of four Chinese firms

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

nNEW DELHI: The Enforcemen­t Directorat­e (ED) said on Saturday that it has frozen four bank accounts containing ~46.96 crore in a probe related to Chinese apps allegedly running online betting operations in India in a racket possibly worth over ~1000 crore.

Raids were conducted on Friday at 15 locations spread across Delhi, Gurugram, Mumbai and Pune over suspected moneylaund­ering. The ED launched a probe under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) on the basis of a Hyderabad police FIR against two companies Dokypay Technology Pvt Ltd and Linkyun Technology Pvt Ltd among others in which the state police arrested a Chinese national, Yan Hao, and two Indians, Dhiraj Sarkar and Ankit Kapoor, earlier this month.

Yan Hao, manager of a company named Beijing Tomorrow Power Company, was allegedly organising an online betting scam. ED said on Saturday that Chinese nationals, with the help of some Indian chartered accountant­s, floated multiple Indian companies. “Initially dummy Indian directors were used to incorporat­e the companies and, after some time, Chinese nationals travelled to India and took directorsh­ip in these companies. Some locals were hired and used to open bank accounts with HSBC Bank and open trade accounts with online wallets namely Paytm, Cashfree, Razorpay, etc,” ED said. It added that the accused companies launch pan-indian operations .

Detailing the modus operandi, ED said once bank accounts were opened, the internet access credential­s were couriered by the Indian employees to China and major payment instructio­ns came from the owners in China.

“Accused companies floated large number of similar looking websites which were hosted through Cloudfare, US. These websites attracted gullible persons to become members and to place bets... Further, a network of agents was hired to attract new customers/members. These agents created closed Telegram and Whatsapp based groups and attracted lakhs... Referral codes were used to privately invite new members. This also helped the sponsoring member to earn commission,” ED said.

“Paytm and Cashfree were used to collect money and pay commission to all these agent members. Hundreds of websites were created to promote online betting under the garb of e-commerce. All websites were not activated daily. Some were activated for placing bets and the informatio­n on daily active websites was shared to members using Telegram groups,” it added.

It said that two bank accounts of Dokypay saw a collection of ~1,268 crore, of which ~300 crore came via Paytm and around ~600 crore was transferre­d out via Paytm gateway. “Account analysis of M/s Linkyun Technolgy revealed a similar pattern.”

Large unexplaine­d financial transactio­ns were also seen with other Indian companies running Chinese dating apps for Indians. “There is a suspicion that apart from indulging in banned activities like online betting, this network of companies with their reliance on online wallets and their lax regulatory systems could have been used for hawala transactio­ns as well. ED is in the process of obtaining informatio­n from online wallet companies, HSBC Bank, registrar of companies, etc,” ED said. HT couldn’t immediatel­y contact the Chinese firms for comment.

 ??  ?? Ranjan Gogoi n
Ranjan Gogoi n

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