Khaleej Times

Fugitive Economic Offenders Bill gets prez’s nod

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new delhi — President Ram Nath Kovind has given assent to a Bill that will deter fugitive economic offenders to evade legal process in India and flee the country.

A fugitive economic offender is any individual against whom warrants for arrest is issued for his involvemen­t in select economic offences involving amount of at least Rs1 billion or more and has left India so as to avoid criminal prosecutio­n.

The Fugitive Economic Offenders Act, 2018 has got the nod from the president, according to an official order.

The new legislatio­n will prevent big economic offenders like Vijay Mallya and Nirav Modi from fleeing the country and evading the law. Both Mallya and Modi, wanted in cases being probed by the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI), are out of India.

The new law allows designated special court to declare a person as fugitive economic offender and to confiscate his property, including ‘benami’ ones. “All the rights and title in the confiscate­d property shall, from the date of the confiscati­on order, vest in the central government, free from all encumbranc­es,” the Act says.

The Fugitive Economic Offenders Bill, 2018 was passed by the Rajya Sabha on July 25. The Lok Sabha had cleared the measure on July 19.

Justifying the financial limit of Rs1 billion for invoking the provisions of this new law, Finance Minister Piyush Goyal had recently said in parliament that it was being done to “catch the big offenders and not to clog the courts”.

“This bill is an effective, expeditiou­s and constituti­onal way to stop these offenders from running away. Legislativ­e changes or a new law must be in place to confiscate assets of such absconders till they don’t present themselves in front of the courts. We will also work out what has to be done with the confiscate­d assets,” Goyal had said in Rajya Sabha.

The Enforcemen­t Directorat­e will be the investigat­ive agency under the Act, he had said.

The president has also given nod to other laws — the Negotiable Instrument­s (Amendment) Act, 2018, the State Banks (Repeal and Amendment) Act, 2018 and the Specific Relief (Amendment) Act, 2018.

The Negotiable Instrument­s (Amendment) Act is aimed at allowing a court to try offences related to cheque bounce expeditiou­sly and direct the drawee to pay a minimum of 20 per cent of the cheque amount as interim compensati­on.

The State Banks (Repeal and Amendment) Act is to repeal two other laws — The State Bank of India (Subsidiary Banks) Act, 1959 and the State Bank of Hyderabad Act, 1956 — and to further amend the State Bank of India Act of 1955.

The Specific Relief (Amendment) Act, 2018 grants a party the right to seek damages from the other side in case of a breach of a business contract and to reduce discretion of courts in such matters. Bills in these regards were approved by Parliament recently. —

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