Millennium Post

Yi-national Herald IT case: Sonia Gandhi, Fernandes move HC

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: Former Congress President Sonia Gandhi and party leader Oscar Fernandes on Monday moved the Delhi High Court challengin­g the reopening of their assessment­s by the Income tax Department regarding the Young Indian-national Herald transactio­ns.

The separate petitions filed by Gandhi and Fernandes are listed for hearing tomorrow before a bench of Justices S Ravindra Bhat and A K Chawla.

A similar plea filed earlier by Congress President Rahul Gandhi is also listed for hearing tomorrow before the same bench.

The court had on August 8, listed Rahul's plea for hearing tomorrow after Additional Solicitor General (ASG) Tushar Mehta had opposed issuance of any interim order by the court.

The bench had rejected the oral plea of Rahul's lawyers to prohibit the media from reporting or publishing the court proceeding­s.

According to the tax department, Rahul's assessment for the years 2011-12 was decided to be reopened as he did not disclose that he was a director in the company -Young Indian Pvt Ltd (YI) -since 2010.

As per the department, the shares Rahul has in YI would lead him to have an income of Rs 154 crore and not about Rs 68 lakh, as was assessed by it earlier.

The department has in the instant case applied section 147 of the Income Tax Act, which provides for bringing under the tax net any income which has escaped assessment in the original assessment.

Rahul's lawyers had said the query put to their client during the scrutiny of his assessment was whether he had any interest in any company or sister concern in which he was a director. He had replied in the negative as YI was a Section 25 company, a non-profit entity, and hence no director would have any interest in it.

The tax department has already issued a demand notice for Rs 249.15 crore to YI for the assessment year 2011-12.

YI, which was incorporat­ed in November 2010 with a capital of Rs 50 lakh, had acquired almost all the shareholdi­ng of Associated Journal Ltd (AJL), the owner of the National Herald newspaper.

The IT department's move followed its probe on a complaint alleging that the Gandhis had misappropr­iated AJL'S assets while transferri­ng their shares to the newly formed Young Indian.

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