The Sunday Guardian

Rough days, but both PC, son STILL out of bounds of LAW

Days after SC rap on his knuckles, Karti faced six-hour interrogat­ion by ED on Thursday while Chidambara­m Senior too was grilled for five hours the next day.

- SANJEEV KUMAR NAYAK NEW DELHI

Former Union Minister and senior Congress leader Palaniappa­n Chidambara­m and his son Karti seem to be running out of luck these days. While the Supreme Court hearing his plea has minced no words in reining in the junior, the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e (ED) probing into Aircel-maxis and INX Media moneylaund­ering cases is hounding the father-son duo day in day out. The investigat­ing agency sleuths grilled the senior Chidambara­m for five hours on Friday, a day after they interrogat­ed the son for six long hours.

While hearing his plea last week, Chief Justice of India Ranjan Gogoi did allow Karti to go abroad but used strong language in warning him against taking the law lightly and also asked him to “end his non-cooperatio­n” with ED. “You can go wherever you want to, you can do whatever you want, but don’t play around with the law. If there is an iota of noncoopera­tion, (we) will come down heavily (on you),” Justice Gogoi told Karti curtly.

When his counsel K.V. Vishwanath­an told the Bench that Karti had been cooperatin­g with the probe, the CJI quipped, “We know you are not cooperatin­g. We do not wish to say anything if you do not cooperate and fail to appear. Only God can help you. We remind you, don’t play around with the law.”

The court allowed him to tour abroad from 10 to 26 February. The Bench, however, categorica­lly instructed Karti to appear before the ED on 5, 6, 7 and 12 March for the next round of questionin­g and asked him to deposit Rs 10 crore as security before leaving the country. He is expected to travel abroad again from 23 to 31 March.

Karti had approached the court seeking permission to travel to France, Spain, Germany and the United Kingdom for the next few months for internatio­nal tennis tournament­s organised by a company called “Totus Tennis Ltd” having its registered office in Britain.

However, the ED is opposed to such pleas that claim that Karti needs to travel abroad as he is associated with tennis as a “former player, current administra­tor and entreprene­ur”.

Representi­ng the ED, Solicitor-general Tushar Mehta told the court that frequent trips by the petitioner are coming in the way of the probe into the two cases involving him.

On earlier occasions also, the ED had informed the court how Karti’s frequent overseas jaunts were delaying the probe beyond its deadline and how he was misusing the liberty granted to him by the court for evading questionin­g. Mehta had also submitted that the Apex Court’s permission was “blatantly and brazenly hampering, subverting, jeopardisi­ng and protractin­g” the investigat­ion pending against him on the pretext of his nonavailab­ility in the country.

Appearing before the Bench during an earlier hearing, ED Deputy Director Rajeev Sharma had apprised the court of Karti’s “non-cooperatio­n” during interrogat­ions. “Whenever he (Karti) was confronted with the documents, he showed his irritation, sometimes anger and then convenient­ly avoided answering the questions on one pretext or the other,” Sharma had informed the court.

The ED had also submitted before the Bench on another occasion that “Karti has filed as many applicatio­ns as possible in various fora under different jurisdicti­ons, trying to create an illusion of being a victim of political vendetta and also in the garb of exhausting his constituti­onal remedies to protect his fundamenta­l rights.”

The senior Chidambara­m too used the same alibi when he appeared before the agency on Friday claiming that this is “an instance of political vendetta” against him by the present ruling dispensati­on. The agency has questioned the Chidambara­ms in these cases for a number of times in the past and sought their custody, but the court has granted them interim protection from arrest keeping the father-son duo out of the bounds of law so far.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Devotees throw turmeric powder as an offering to the shepherd god Khandoba as others carry a palanquin during ‘Somvati Amavasya’ at a temple in Jejuri near Pune on Monday.
REUTERS Devotees throw turmeric powder as an offering to the shepherd god Khandoba as others carry a palanquin during ‘Somvati Amavasya’ at a temple in Jejuri near Pune on Monday.
 ??  ?? P. Chidambara­m with son Karti
P. Chidambara­m with son Karti

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