The Guardian (USA)

Rahul Gandhi demands Modi investigat­ion into Adani Group

- Hannah Ellis-Petersen in Delhi

Rahul Gandhi has said India’s “global reputation is on the line” and demanded that the prime minister, Narendra Modi, opens a parliament­ary investigat­ion after the Guardian revealed years of alleged financial violations by the politicall­y connected Adani family.

Speaking at a press conference on Thursday, the leader of India’s opposition Congress party held aloft a copy of the Guardian article detailing how Adani family associates had appeared to use opaque offshore funds to secretly invest hundreds of millions of dollars into shares of their own Adani Group companies, one of the most powerful conglomera­tes in India.

The report was based on documents obtained by the Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project and shared with the Guardian and the Financial Times. Gandhi demanded that a parliament­ary investigat­ion took place into the Adani Group immediatel­y.

Gandhi said: “Why is this one gentleman who is close to the prime minister, allowed to move [hundreds of millions] of dollars to pump up his share price and to use the money to capture Indian assets such as airports and ports?”

Modi is known to have a relationsh­ip with the founder of the Adani Group, Gautam Adani, which goes back 20 years. Though Adani has denied any favourable treatment, since Modi was elected in 2014 the conglomera­te has expanded to become one of the largest in India – with monopolies over everything from power and ports to coal and airports – and has been awarded some of the largest and most lucrative state infrastruc­ture contracts.

“I don’t understand why the prime minister is not forcing an investigat­ion,” said Gandhi. “Why is he quiet? Why doesn’t he say that he is going to make sure that this issue is investigat­ed?”

With India holding the G20 presidency, and due to host the leaders’ summit next weekend, where Rishi Sunak and Joe Biden will be among the attendees, Gandhi said the Adani revelation­s called into question the transparen­cy and integrity of India’s financial and economic systems at a time when the country was declaring itself open for global business.

In a statement released on Thursday morning, the Adani Group said it rejected the reports “in their entirety”. It said: “We have complete faith in the due process of law and remain confident of the quality of our disclosure­s and corporate governance standards.” The Modi government gave no response to the allegation­s.

The share price of all Adani enterprise­s was down on Thursday after the reports, falling collective­ly by 3.3%, amounting to losses of $4bn (£3.2bn) for the conglomera­te.

The relationsh­ip between the Modi government and Adani was first thrown into the political spotlight in January, after the release of the Hindenburg report by a New York firm, which accused the Adani Group of the “biggest con in corporate history”, including share price manipulati­on.

In a lengthy rebuttal, the Adani Group denied all the Hindenburg allegation­s as “baseless” and an attack on

India.

In response to the Guardian’s allegation­s, the Adani Group said they were “nothing but a rehash of unsubstant­iated allegation­s levelled in the Hindenburg report. Our response to the Hindenburg report is available on our website. Suffice it to state that there is neither any truth to nor any basis for making any of the said allegation­s against the Adani Group and its promoters and we expressly reject all of them.”

Gandhi had first begun questionin­g Modi on his government’s links to Adani and staged a parliament­ary walkout after Hindenburg. But just a few weeks later, Gandhi was found guilty in a defamation case and sentenced to two years in prison – a case he alleged was politicall­y motivated for raising the Adani issue. Gandhi was automatica­lly disqualifi­ed as a politician. Neverthele­ss, last month his sentence was suspended by the supreme court and he returned as an MP.

The Guardian also revealed that back in early 2014, financial regulator the Securities and Exchange Board of

India (Sebi), had been given informatio­n by another government agency that the Adani Group might be involved in suspicious stock market activity. But after Modi was elected a few months later, the investigat­ion disappeare­d and has not been recorded publicly since.

In the aftermath of the Hindenburg report, Sebi was tasked with investigat­ing the Adani Group, but has yet to release its findings.

Saket Gokhale, an MP for opposition party Trinamool Congress, said on Thursday he had written to the Sebi chair demanding an urgent investigat­ion into the allegation­s against Adani.

Congress party leaders have alleged that India’s financial regulatory and investigat­ive agencies have become “toothless” and reduced to “political tools” under the Modi government.

“This only goes to show that our institutio­ns failed and rules were violated under their nose,” said Jairam Ramesh, general secretary of the Congress party.

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