Gulf News

Mallya loses UK lawsuit over $1.55b in Indian claims

The 62-year-old is fighting numerous lawsuits in Britain and India

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Indian tycoon Vijay Mallya lost a UK lawsuit filed by Indian banks seeking to collect more than £1.15 billion (Dh5.7 billion, $1.55b) amid allegation­s that he committed massive fraud.

Judge Andrew Henshaw in London yesterday said the lenders, including IDBI Bank Ltd., can enforce an Indian court ruling that relates to allegation­s that Mallya wilfully defaulted on about $1.4 billion in debt for his now-defunct Kingfisher Airlines Ltd. Henshaw also refused to overturn a worldwide order freezing Mallya’s assets.

The 62-year-old is fighting numerous lawsuits in the UK and India over fraud and money-laundering allegation­s. He was arrested in London more than a year ago and is waging another fight to block extraditio­n in a different court about three miles across town.

Lawyers for Mallya declined to comment after the hearing. Henshaw refused permission to appeal Tuesday’s ruling, meaning his attorneys will have to directly petition the Court of Appeal.

Attorneys at law firm TLT in London, who are representi­ng the lenders said the ruling will allow them to enforce the underlying judgement by the Indian debt recovery tribunal immediatel­y. The asset freeze order had forced Mallya to live on £5,000 a week, but his allowance was increased to roughly £20,000 a week earlier this year, lawyers for the lenders said after the hearing.

Refused to return

Mallya was arrested in London April 18 on a warrant issued by Indian authoritie­s accusing him of conspiring to defraud India’s IDBI Bank through a Rs91 billion (Rs4.97 billion) loan to Kingfisher Airlines Ltd. — a premium airline he founded in 2005 and shut down seven years later.

Mallya left India in 2016, saying he was moving to England to be closer to his children. He has refused to return to India and said he fears an unfair trial amid the “media frenzy and hysteria” over unpaid dues. Mallya has also said government agencies are pursuing a “heavily biased investigat­ion” and holding him guilty without trial.

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