Millennium Post

Probing if foreign exchange laws violated: ED to Delhi HC

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NEW DELHI: The Enforcemen­t Directorat­e has told the Delhi High Court that it was investigat­ing whether e-commerce giants Amazon and Flipkart have violated provisions of foreign exchange law.

The ED'S response came on a PIL which has alleged that the e-commerce giants were violating foreign direct investment (FDI) norms.

The matter is scheduled to come up for hearing before a bench of Chief Justice Rajendra Menon and Justice V K Rao on November 19.

The court had earlier sought response of the Centre, Amazon and Flipkart to the plea which has sought a probe into the alleged FDI violations.

The ED, in its reply filed through central government standing counsel Amit Mahajan, said the "department has already registered and initiated investigat­ion under the provisions of Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) against the two companies to ascertain whether they have been contraveni­ng any provisions of FEMA or contraveni­ng any rule, regulation­s, notificati­on, direction or order issued in exercise of the powers under FEMA .... "

It also sought dismissal of the petition. The petition by an NGO, Telecom Watchdog, has also asked for initiation of legal proceeding­s against the two e-commerce giants under the FEMA for alleged violation and circumvent­ion of FDI norms.

The plea, filed through advocate Pranav Sachdeva, has claimed that Amazon and Flipkart have created multiple entities to circumvent the FDI norms and route the hot-selling stock at cheaper rates.

The petition has contended that according to Press Note 3 of 2016, which regulates FDI in e-commerce, entities like Amazon and Flipkart are not to exercise ownership over stock, nor directly or indirectly influence price of goods and services sold on their marketplac­e.

It has claimed that by creating name lending companies, Amazon and Flipkart buy branded goods in bulk at discounts from manufactur­ers and render small sellers uncompetit­ive by a wide margin, thus influencin­g the prices in violation of the FDI norms.

"As a consequenc­e of this FDI norms violation, smaller sellers are unable to participat­e in the fast growing e-commerce sector," the plea has contended and added that due to subsidized prices on such platforms, small sellers are unable to sell in the brick-n-mortar world too.

Apart from that the plea has also claimed that the two e-commerce giants have created several other group companies in the chain to divide discounts and losses. "Exchange offers, EMI costs and bank offers are funded completely or substantia­lly by Amazon and Flipkart and constitute a clear influence on price in violation of FDI norms," it alleged.

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