Arab Times

Gandhis get bail in graft case

Delhi gang-rape attacker to walk free on Sunday

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NEW DELHI, Dec 19, (AFP): An Indian magistrate granted bail to opposition leaders Sonia and Rahul Gandhi minutes after they arrived at a Delhi court Saturday, over allegation­s they illegally acquired a newspaper’s assets.

The Congress Party leaders, scions of India’s famous Gandhi-Nehru dynasty, arrived at the Patiala trial court waving to their supporters as hundreds of police and paramilita­ries stood guard outside.

“Bail was granted, the matter stands adjourned until Feb 20,” defence lawyer R.S. Cheema, who was inside the courtroom, told reporters.

After brief proceeding­s a magistrate granted the mother-son duo bail without conditions on a personal bond of 50,000 rupees ($754) each, the lawyer said.

Sonia’s daughter Priyanka Gandhi and former defence minister A.K. Antony provided sureties, the lawyer said. Three others accused in the case were also granted bail.

The Gandhis were summoned by the court after a politician from the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) filed a private criminal complaint accusing them of misappropr­iating assets of the nowdefunct National Herald.

They fiercely deny Subramania­n Swamy’s allegation­s and accuse Prime Minister Narendra Modi of waging a political vendetta against them and their embattled party, which has been struggling since a bitter electoral defeat last year.

Political

“I have no doubt that the truth will come out. We are well aware of the campaign of attacks and criticism that our political rivals follow,” Sonia Gandhi said at a press conference following the hearing.

“They are targeting us and making full use of the state agencies,” she said.

It followed a tumultuous week in Indian politics which saw members of the embattled Congress and their allies throw parliament into chaos several times in protest at the case.

The intensely bitter spat between the parties looks set to stall the progress of a landmark sales tax reform in parliament.

Separately, Modi clashed with Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal, head of the anti-corruption Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) after federal investigat­ors searched the city administra­tion’s headquarte­rs, with Kejriwal branding the premier a “psychopath”.

The AAP in turn caused a storm by accusing Finance Minister Arun Jaitley of presiding over financial irregulari­ties when he controlled the capital’s cricket associatio­n — a claim he vehemently denies.

Swamy first filed the case against the Congress bosses in 2001.

He accused them of illegally acquiring the now-defunct newspaper’s assets after buying its publisher through a new private company, Young Indian, using a loan from party funds.

He alleged that the Gandhis aimed to grab property worth $332 million owned by the publishing firm, Associated Journals, using fraudulent papers.

Both Gandhis are directors of Young Indian, owning a 76-percent stake in it and the remaining shares.

Sonia and Rahul were first summoned in the case in June 2014, based on a complaint by Swamy but refused to appear in court in person, sending their lawyers instead.

On Dec 7 the Delhi High Court turned down a plea by the Gandhis to quash the latest summons and exempt them from appearing in person.

The National Herald was founded by Jawaharlal Nehru who went on to become India’s first prime minister.

It first published from the northern city of Lucknow in 1938 and played a prominent role promoting nationalis­t sentiment before India’s independen­ce from Britain in 1947.

Sonia Gandhi, widow of Nehru’s grandson Rajiv, later became the chief patron of the trust that ran it.

But dogged by bad management, poor circulatio­n and falling revenue, she finally decided to close the publicatio­n in 2008.

NEW DELHI:

Also:

An attacker in the deadly gang-rape of a student in New Delhi will be freed this weekend, a court said Friday, days after India marked the third anniversar­y of the assault that sparked global outrage.

Jyoti Singh, who was 23, died after being brutally assaulted on a moving bus in New Delhi in December 2012, triggering angry protests over India’s treatment of women.

The Delhi High Court said it was unable to halt the release of the attacker, who was 17 at the time of the rape, because he had served the maximum three years in a juvenile detention facility.

“This is a setback for the entire country. The court said that as per current legislatio­n, he cannot be remanded for more than three years,” Anil Soni, one of the lawyers in the case, told reporters.

“The terror that we had faced a few years back will be back on the 20th of December on our streets,” he added, referring to the release date.

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