Khaleej Times

BR Shetty stopped at airport on way to UAE

Indian banks initiated travel curbs to recover dues

- Issac John

I am planning my imminent return to the UAE as promised. I would like to thank the UAE government, creditors, administra­tors and employees for keeping the operations of the companies alive during this pandemic.

B R Shetty

dubai — B R Shetty, founder and former chairman of the embattled firms NMC Health and Finablr who was making a surprise attempt to return to the UAE after eight months in India, was stopped by immigratio­n officials at the Bengaluru airport on Saturday morning as he was about to board an Etihad flight.

Shetty and his business empire are embroiled in alleged financial irregulari­ties and fraud involving billions of dollars.

His attempt to fly to Abu Dhabi by Etihad Flight EY217, for what he described as his eventual “return to the UAE as promised”, was halted just minutes after he spoke to Khaleej Times from the airport declaring his “complete faith in the justice system of the UAE”.

Shetty, who spoke to Khaleej Times even after he was stopped by the immigratio­n officials, said his wife Dr Chandrakum­ari Shetty, who was to accompany him, was allowed to board the flight which was scheduled to depart at 2.45am on Saturday and arrive at 5.40am in Abu Dhabi.

It is learnt that a consortium of Indian banks, including Bank of Baroda with $250 million in outstandin­g loans due from Shetty, had initiated travel restrictio­ns on the NMC founder in an attempt to recover the debts. Several other Indian banks, including Federal

Bank, have considerab­le exposure to Shetty-run firms.

An Indian court has already restricted Shetty and his wife from selling or encumberin­g properties that Bank of Baroda claimed are personally guaranteed as security by the businessma­n.

The billionair­e entreprene­ur, who has been away from Abu Dhabi since February, said on Saturday evening that he was trying to get the travel curbs removed and is hopeful of returning to Abu Dhabi within days “to support the UAE authoritie­s and all relevant bodies to correct any injustice done to the companies, their employees, shareholde­rs and other stakeholde­rs and help find solutions to outstandin­g matters”.

A few weeks ago, Shetty had sought an investigat­ion by Indian federal agencies into a series of frauds allegedly committed by former top executives of his companies.

In the complaint, a copy of which was obtained by Khaleej Times, he had stated that he was “the victim of a complex fraud” amounting to $6.6 billion involving his former senior executives at his London-listed NMC Health and some bank officials. Finablr, also a London-listed money remittance group, has an overall debt of $1.3 billion, excluding the debt of its Travelex Holdings Ltd unit.

In a statement sent from the airport before his aborted attempt to fly to Abu Dhabi, Shetty said he travelled to India in February “to be with my ailing brother who sadly passed away at the end of March, just as the pandemic spread across the world disrupting internatio­nal travel.

While I was in India, our investigat­ions started to unravel details of the fraud in NMC Health, Finablr and some private companies owned by my family.”

“I said at the time that I intended to return to the UAE and, having filed a criminal complaint against the suspected perpetrato­rs of the fraud in India, I am planning my imminent return to the UAE as promised,” he said.

He said reports that he had “fled the country” could not be further from the truth.

Confessing that the “fraud has regrettabl­y created huge challenges” for the companies, he said such shocking developmen­ts caused great hardship for his employees, “disruption­s to suppliers, and losses to shareholde­rs including myself and creditors”.

“I would like to thank the UAE government, creditors, administra­tors and employees for keeping the operations of the companies alive during this pandemic,” Shetty said.

“I have complete faith in the justice system of the UAE and look forward to the perpetrato­rs of the fraud facing justice,” he added.

In October, in a 55-page complaint filed with the Indian government department­s, Shetty had accused 10 of his former executives, including Prasanth and Promoth Manghat — brothers who were former CEOs of NMC and Finablr — of perpetrati­ng “a large, complex and sophistica­ted corporate and financial fraud”. Shetty stated in the complaint that he was calling for a probe into “the embezzleme­nt, corruption, and laundering of money of his companies on the basis of my personal knowledge and the basis of my examinatio­n of documents and records obtained by me”.

He also noted that he had filed a complaint dated April 27, 2020 with the Federal Attorney-General of the UAE, seeking a detailed investigat­ion into the affairs of the group companies “in view of the forgery, fraud, and embezzleme­nt” described in his petition.

 ??  ?? B R Shetty says he is trying to get Indian travel restrictio­ns removed and planning to return to Abu Dhabi within days
B R Shetty says he is trying to get Indian travel restrictio­ns removed and planning to return to Abu Dhabi within days

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