Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
International

India Can Begin Extradition Process Against Nirav Modi: Britain Authority

Darpan News Desk IANS, 14 Jun, 2018 11:56 AM
    India has been informed by the UK's Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) that it can initiate extradition proceedings against Indian diamond merchant Nirav Modi even though his exact whereabouts remain uncertain, a senior Indian official said today.
     
     
    The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) has begun the process of filing an extradition request for Nirav Modi, which will then have to be approved by the UK Home Office following which an extradition warrant can be issued.
     
     
    "There is no confirmation about Nirav Modi's whereabouts. He could be in the UK or indeed left the UK since his last reported exit on a flight to Paris. We have now been advised by the CPS that we can proceed with an extradition request so that a warrant can be issued and he can be arrested on being traced," the official said.
     
     
    According to information available in the UK, Nirav Modi - wanted in India for an alleged Rs. 13,500 crore Punjab National Bank (PNB) fraud - arrived in London earlier this year on an Indian passport.
     
     
    The UK government was informed about the revocation of that particular passport via a formal Note Verbale from the Indian authorities on February 19, following which the UK Home Office indicated that the businessman had already entered the UK on that travel document but there was no record of him exiting the country.
     
     
    This gave rise to speculation in India that Nirav Modi may be hiding out in the UK. However, subsequently the Indian authorities became aware of multiple Indian passports being used by the diamond merchant, with his last documented exit from the UK at the end of March by air to Paris.
     
     
    It remains unclear exactly how many passports Nirav Modi has been travelling on in the last few months and strict data protection laws in the UK have prevented the British government from confirming if he has indefinite leave to remain (ILR) in the UK or if he has sought to apply for political asylum.
     
     
    "If he has ILR in the UK, he would have to be extradited. However, if that is not the case, he can be deported on the basis of illegally travelling to Britain using fraudulent travel documentation. We are pursuing both these lines," the senior Indian official said.
     
     
    If Nirav Modi does go ahead with a political asylum request in the UK, it is likely to delay any extradition proceedings at the very least.
     
     
    "It is much harder to succeed in an asylum claim from a constitutional democracy like India. However, if there was evidence of an unfair trial, a person's claim might succeed," said Mark Symes, a senior immigration barrister who has represented another wealthy Indian national in the past who was refused asylum by the UK Home Office but won the claim before an independent judge on appeal.
     
     
    "Generally speaking, a person needs to prove they face persecution rather than prosecution. So, a legitimate prosecution that leads to a lawful conviction following a fair trial could not give rise to a viable claim. However, if the charges were politically motivated or the trial was very unfair or excess punishment might result, the claim might succeed," he explains.
     
     
    A non-bailable warrant was issued against Nirav Modi and 10 other accused, including his family members, in the PNB fraud case following a chargesheet filed by the Enforcement Directorate (ED) last month. The businessman is believed to have left India with his family around a month before the PNB filed its first complaint with the CBI at the beginning of this year.
     
     
    Since then there has been a flurry of media speculation over his whereabouts and the kind of passport he is travelling on. Most of these reports have either been officially denied or remain unsubstantiated.
     
     
    The UK Home Office has refused to comment on "individual cases".

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Lord Swraj Paul Dedicates Caparo Plants In Honour Of His Late Son

    Lord Swraj Paul Dedicates Caparo Plants In Honour Of His Late Son
    Leading NRI industrialist Lord Swraj Paul has dedicated Caparo plants in India in honour of his late son Angad Paul.

    Lord Swraj Paul Dedicates Caparo Plants In Honour Of His Late Son

    Saudi-Based NRI Joins Hands With Super 30 To Help Talented Minority Students

    Saudi-Based NRI Joins Hands With Super 30 To Help Talented Minority Students
    Obaidur Rahman, a businessman who is also chairman of the Bihar foundation in Saudi Arabia, has formed an organization called Rahman 30, which will select 30 talented students from the minority community

    Saudi-Based NRI Joins Hands With Super 30 To Help Talented Minority Students

    Amarinder Singh Sanctions Rs 3.56 Lakh For Punjab Youth Stuck In Sharjah

    Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh on Saturday sanctioned Rs 3,56,700 from the Chief Minister's Relief Fund, on humanitarian grounds, to facilitate the return of a Gurdaspur resident from a ship he is stuck in at Sharjah Port.

    Amarinder Singh Sanctions Rs 3.56 Lakh For Punjab Youth Stuck In Sharjah

    15-Year-Old Indian Girl Dies Of Heart Attack On Saudi Arabia Beach

    15-Year-Old Indian Girl Dies Of Heart Attack On Saudi Arabia Beach
    A 15-year-old Indian girl has died of a heart attack while playing at the popular Half Moon beach in Al-Khobar city of Saudi Arabia.

    15-Year-Old Indian Girl Dies Of Heart Attack On Saudi Arabia Beach

    PICS: PM Modi Begins 'Groundbreaking' Visit, Benjamin Netanyahu Says 'Historic'

    PICS: PM Modi Begins 'Groundbreaking' Visit, Benjamin Netanyahu Says 'Historic'
    A new fast-growing Israeli Chrysanthemum flower has been named after visiting Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to honour him.

    PICS: PM Modi Begins 'Groundbreaking' Visit, Benjamin Netanyahu Says 'Historic'

    Former Indian-American Executives Charged With $4 Million Fraud Scheme

    Former Indian-American Executives Charged With $4 Million Fraud Scheme
    Two top Indian-American former executives of a Chicago-area information technology company have been charged by the US federal regulator in an accounting fraud scheme in which they misled investors and siphoned millions of dollars from the firm for their personal benefit. 

    Former Indian-American Executives Charged With $4 Million Fraud Scheme