Business Standard

Nirav Modi can be extradited to India: UK court

Key accused in PNB scam case has 14 days to appeal

- ASHIS RAY

Nirav Modi, once touted as a billionair­e designer diamantair­e, and now wanted on charges of fraud and money laundering in the $2-billion (~14,000-crore) Punjab National Bank scam case, was on Thursday ordered by a London court to be extradited to India, with the judge ruling that the 49-year-old did have a case to answer before Indian courts.

The verdict will, as is the procedure in Britain, be referred to the country’s home secretary, Priti Patel, to authorise deportatio­n at her discretion. But Nirav Modi is permitted to appeal against the ruling in the high court.

After nearly two years of proceeding­s since he was arrested at the British capital’s well-known shopping precinct of Oxford Street, a district judge at the Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court, Samuel Goozee, ruled: “I am satisfied that there is evidence upon which Mr Modi could be convicted… A prima facie case is establishe­d…he has a case to answer for in India.” The Prime Minister’s Office has acknowledg­ed it was tipped off about Nirav Modi’s uncle Mehul Choksi (the two had business dealings) as early as July 2016. PNB complained to the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) about dubious letters of undertakin­g (Lous) in February 2017. Yet no action was taken. Choksi fled to the Caribbean island of Antigua, with which India does not have an extraditio­n arrangemen­t.

Unlike the owner of the now-defunct Kingfisher Airlines Vijay Mallya’s case, where there were doubts about his culpabilit­y — which have since increased after the CBI and the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e’s failure to prosecute the IDBI Bank executives who were accused of colluding with Mallya after more than four years —the charges against Nirav Modi on the face of it looked more convincing and therefore his defence comparativ­ely weaker.

The British Crown Prosecutio­n Service barrister Helen Malcolm, appearing on behalf of the Indian government, had argued Nirav Modi operated “a Ponzi-like scheme where new Lous were used to repay old ones”. Nirav Modi’s counsel Clare Montgomery put the onus on the bank by saying it was “ill-advised lending”.

Malcolm provided assurances to the court that Barrack 12 in Arthur Road Jail in Mumbai, where Modi is to be held, meets acceptable human rights standards in terms of its conditions and facilities. A video recording of a cell where he would be incarcerat­ed was presented to the court.

As a last ditch effort, Montgomery pleaded her client’s mental state (claimed to be depression) made him a suicide risk, if transporte­d to India. She emphasised this issue did not meet the Section 91 threshold of the UK’S Extraditio­n Act 2003. The judge did not, though, feel sending him back to India would be “unjust or oppressive”. Nirav Modi’s examinatio­n by an independen­t specialist cannot, however, be ruled out.

Nirav Modi was arrested in March 2019. Contrary to the treatment of Mallya, who was immediatel­y granted bail, Modi has remained locked up ever since, thereby perhaps reflecting the seriousnes­s of the matter. He appeared throughout

in the case via videoconfe­rencing from his prison in Wandworth in south-east London. He has up to 14 days to appeal against the order. Nirav Modi’s other option is to apply for asylum.

Reacting to the developmen­t, a spokespers­on for the CBI said, “The today’s judgment…is a significan­t achievemen­t in the context of the CBI’S efforts to curb corruption and is a reminder that fugitives, who have eluded the process of law after commission of large value frauds, cannot consider themselves above the process merely because they have

changed jurisdicti­ons.”

“The judgment also vindicates the painstakin­g investigat­ion by the CBI, especially since Nirav Modi had raised various issues with regard to the admissibil­ity of evidence, the fairness of investigat­ion, trial, prison conditions, availabili­ty of health facilities in India and extraneous considerat­ion, with a view to divert attention from his own acts,” the spokespers­on said.

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NIRAV MODI

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