The Asian Age

Antigua: Indian agencies gave Choksi ‘ all- clear’

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT with agency inputs NEW DELHI, AUG. 3

Antigua has claimed it was told by Indian agencies that there was no adverse informatio­n against Punjab National Bank ( PNB) scam accused Mehul Choksi when it did a background check on the fugitive billionair­e before granting him citizenshi­p in 2017, a local media report in the Caribbean nation has said.

India swiftly set the record straight, saying that the police clearance certificat­e ( PCC) was issued to Choksi by passport office, Mumbai, for Antigua and Barbuda on March 16, 2017, since at that time there was a “clear police verificati­on report ( PVR) available on his passport”. There was nothing incriminat­ing or adverse against Choksi at that time since the scam surfaced later.

In another important developmen­t, Indian government sources said New Delhi is sending

an extraditio­n request on Choksi to Antigua. The request for Choksi’s extraditio­n comes close to a request sent to the United Kingdom for extraditio­n of another PNB scam- accused jeweller Nirav Modi. The government informed Parliament that two Red Corner Notices have been issued against Modi by the Interpol.

In Choksi’s case, while the Antiguan authority responsibl­e for grant of investment­linked citizenshi­p named the Securities and Exchange Board of India ( Sebi) as one of the Indian agencies

that gave a him a clearance, the Indian securities market regulator rejected the claim.

“Sebi has neither received any request from the Citizenshi­p by Investment Unit ( CIU) of Antigua for updates on any investigat­ion nor provided any such informatio­n to CIU,” the regulator said.

According to reports, Choksi fled India on January 4 this year and took oath of allegiance

in Antigua on January 15. His citizenshi­p there was cleared in November 2017.

According to news agency reports, Choksi’s applicatio­n for citizenshi­p in Antigua in May 2017 was accompanie­d with clearance from the local police as required by norms, said Antiguan newspaper the Daily Observer, citing a statement from the Citizenshi­p by Investment Unit of Antigua and Barbuda ( CIU).

Choksi is one of the alleged mastermind­s of the $ 2 billion scam in the staterun Punjab National Bank ( PNB) and uncle of fugitive diamantair­e Nirav Modi.

“The said police clearance certificat­e from the government of India, ministry of external affairs regional passport office, Mumbai, certified that there was no adverse informatio­n against Choksi which would render him ineligible for grant of travel facilities including visa for Antigua and Barbuda,” the Antiguan media report was quoted as stating.

The authoritie­s in the island country did a thorough check on Choksi from open source global agencies, including the Interpol, that there was “no instance” of any derogatory informatio­n against him, it added.

The Antiguan authoritie­s, as part of their own checks, found two instances of Sebi action against Choksi’s firms in 2014 and 2017 and sought more informatio­n on them, the report further said. It further quoted CIU as claiming that the Sebi had told authoritie­s in Antigua that one case was “satisfacto­rily closed” and there was “insufficie­nt evidence” to pursue the second matter.

As per the Antiguan media report, the CIU has said if there was a warrant against Choksi when his applicatio­n of citizenshi­p was being processed, Interpol should have been informed about it and it should have been part of national criminal database.

Under the Citizenshi­p by Investment Program of Antigua and Barbuda, a person can take their passport on a minimum investment of $ 100,000 in the NDF investment fund.

The report in Antiguan media have sparked a political slugfest with the Congress alleging that detail” emerging from the Caribbean nation have “exposed the complicity and connivance” of the Modi government in Choksi’s escape.

Congress communicat­ions chief Randeep Singh Surjewala said, “Loot and make them scoot is the prime policy of the Modi government. The shocking details reveal how the Modi government enacted this mega scam.”

He added, “Why did the CBI/ ED not move the Interpol for a warrant against Mehul Choksi or provide the requisite evidence of criminal fraud against him? Is it not correct that this deliberate failure on part of CBI/ ED in providing evidence to Interpol, led to Interpol giving a clean chit to Choksi?”

According to reports, on January 16 the $ 2 billion scam was detected by the Brady House branch of PNB in Mumbai, making it the biggest banking scam in the country. Choksi and his companies allegedly availed credit from overseas branches of Indian banks using the fraudulent guarantees of PNB given through letters of undertakin­g ( LoUs) and letters of credit issued by the Brady House branch which were not repaid, bringing liability on the state- run bank, officials had said.

An LoU is a guarantee given by an issuing bank to Indian banks having branches abroad to grant shortterm credit to the applicant.

CBI sources said the agency has cited three grounds on the basis of which Choksi

can be extradited to India to face trial. They said the agency has underlined the principle of reciprocit­y where fugitives can be exchanged between two countries as and when required, principle of dual criminalit­y which states that the alleged charge on the fugitive should be an offence in both the countries, and the United Nations Convention against Corruption to which both Antigua and India are signatorie­s. The UN Convention urges its signatory nations to cooperate in matters pertaining to corruption, they said.

Meanwhile, in the Nirav Modi case, minister of state ( MoS) for external affairs Gen. ( retd.) V. K. Singh informed Parliament, “An extraditio­n request has been received in the ministry of external affairs from the ministry of home affairs ( MHA) for the extraditio­n of Modi from the United Kingdom ( UK). The request has been sent by a special diplomatic bag to the high commission of India, London, for onward transmissi­on to the UK authoritie­s.”

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