Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

After Chawla and Mallya, Nirav extraditio­n next big case in UK

- Prasun Sonwalkar prasun.sonwalkar@hindustant­imes.com

LONDON: Fugitive jeweller Nirav Modi’s case is the latest in highprofil­e extraditio­n cases being pursued in British courts, where until recently the evidence Indian investigat­ors produced did not hold up to scrutiny. But the intense media focus has raised the bar, officials said.

Nirav Modi’s case is set to begin in the Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court after British home secretary, Sajid Javid, last week certified India’s extraditio­n request.

Two other high-profile cases of businessma­n Vijay Mallya and alleged cricket bookie, Sanjeev Chawla, have moved to the higher court. The Magistrate­s’ Court in December ordered Mallya’s extraditio­n to face fraud charges in India. The extraditio­n of Chawla, who is an accused in the match-fixing scandal involv- ing late former South African captain Hansie Cronje in 2000, was cleared a month later.

A spokesman for the judiciary said the notice of appeal was filed on February 14 in the Mallya case. “The appellant [Mallya] now has to send grounds for appeal. When these are received the respondent [home office] has to send a notice back,” the spokesman said. “Up to 20 working days are allowed for this to happen. Then it will be sent to a single judge who will look at it on the papers to see if it will go ahead to an appeal hearing.”

Javid ordered Chawla’s extraditio­n on February 27. Chawla has 14 working days – until March 19 – to appeal against the order. Mallya and Chawla used prison conditions and risk to their human rights as one of the grounds to block extraditio­n.

Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) and Enforcemen­t Directorat­e officials are due in London for discussion­s on the Nirav Modi case, which will begin after the Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court is satisfied with material provided with Javid’s certificat­ion.

In the previous cases, bundles of poorly-written First informatio­n Reports and documents, many hand-written, followed Indian extraditio­n requests to Britain, until focus on Mallya’s case prompted renewed attention to improving the quality of evidence and paperwork, officials said.the poor paperwork is blamed for failures in securing extraditio­ns since India and the UK signed an extraditio­n treaty in 1993.

Officials associated with the Mallya case said it has been a “learning exercise” for ministries, the CBI and others. For the first time, there was “joined-up thinking” and much attention to detail in various quarters in New Delhi and London, an official said. A similar focus is likely in the Modi case.

A joint secretary in a key ministry was removed during the Mallya hearings following a delay in producing a vital document for submission to the Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court. From a t i me when I ndi a n bureaucrac­y was known for delays, the Mallya case evidently brought about a change of approach.

 ?? VIDEO GRAB: THE DAILY TELEGRAPH ?? Nirav Modi was spotted in London on Saturday.
VIDEO GRAB: THE DAILY TELEGRAPH Nirav Modi was spotted in London on Saturday.

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