Hindustan Times (Noida)

Antigua revokes citizenshi­p of Mehul Choksi

- Neeraj Chauhan letters@hindustant­imes.com

THE PNB FRAUD ACCUSED IS FIGHTING THE REVOCATION OF HIS CITIZENSHI­P IN AN ANTIGUAN CIVIL COURT

NEW DELHI: Antigua and Barbuda has cancelled the citizenshi­p of Mehul Choksi granted under the Caribbean nation’s Citizenshi­p by Investment Programme (CIP) in November 2017 even as his partner-incrime in the ₹13,500-crore fraud case, Nirav Modi, suffered a legal setback after a UK court ordered his extraditio­n last week, people familiar with the matter said.

The developmen­t was confirmed to HT by at least two officers in the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) and Enforcemen­t Directorat­e (ED), who added that the fugitive businessma­n is currently fighting revocation of his citizenshi­p in an Antiguan civil court.

“Antigua cancelled his citizenshi­p sometime last year after which he has approached a civil court in St John’s. We believe he will lose his appeal as he is fighting the Antiguan government on a well-establishe­d investment scheme, which he misused to take refuge in the island nation after cheating Indian banks,” said the CBI officer cited above.

They added that as soon as Choksi exhausts his appeal against revocation of citizenshi­p, his extraditio­n proceeding­s will begin as Antiguan Prime Minister Gaston Browne has already assured India of sending him back.

According to a June 2019 report by Antigua Observer, Browne, while calling Choksi a “crook”, had said that his citizenshi­p will be revoked as his reputation had tarnished the image of CIP. The CIP, run by CIU (Citizenshi­p by Investment Unit) of Antigua allows a person to get citizenshi­p of the island nation, which comes with visafree travel to 132 countries, upon investment of $200,000.

In the absence of an extraditio­n treaty between two countries, India sought Choksi’s extraditio­n in August 2018 on the principle of reciprocit­y and dual criminalit­y but it is pending due to the legal issues. The principle of dual criminalit­y’ requires that the offence for which the extraditio­n is sought has to be an offence in both the – requesting and requested -countries.

The investigat­ors are hopeful that as soon as Mehul Choksi loses his citizenshi­p revocation appeal, his extraditio­n will be easy as the evidence against him very strong, exactly like Nirav Modi as both indulged in the use of Letters of Undertakin­g (LOUS), dummy companies, destroying of evidence and intimidati­on of witnesses.

Last Thursday, UK court not only accepted CBI and ED’S evidence against Modi but it praised the nature of documents, audio/video files and testimonie­s gathered by the investigat­ors.

Mehul Choksi siphoned off close to ₹7,080 crore in the ₹13,578 crore PNB fraud before fleeing to Antigua on January 4, 2018, a month before the megascam came to notice.

In a charge sheet filed last year, the ED claimed Choksi didn’t just cheat Indian banks but customers and lenders in Dubai and the United States as well. His assets worth ₹2,500 crore have already been attached. Advocate Vijay Aggarwal, who represents Choksi, could not be reached for his comments.

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