The Asian Age

700+ Indians in ‘Paradise’ expose, govt orders probe

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Continued from Page 1 lobbyist Niira Radia, filmstar Sanjay Dutt’s wife Dilnashin, Union minister of state Jayant Sinha and Rajya Sabha MP R.K. Sinha. Most of them, however, have denied any wrongdoing.

The Paradise Papers documents include nearly seven million loan agreements, financial statements, emails, trust deeds and other paperwork over nearly 50 years from inside Appleby, a prestigiou­s offshore law firm with offices in Bermuda and elsewhere.

The leaked documents include files from the smaller, family-owned trust company Asiaciti, and from company registries in 19 secrecy jurisdicti­ons. The Sun Group, founded by Nand Lal Khemka, figured as Appleby’s second largest client with as many as 118 offshore entities, as per the reports.

The Indian names also included those associated with the Sun-TV-AircelMaxi­s case, the EssarLoop 2G case, the SNCLavalin in which Kerala CM Pinarayi Vijayan was named and then cleared, and a case against Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy; as well as entities linked to the Rajasthan ambulance scam that names an entity called Ziquista Healthcare (with Congress leader Sachin Pilot and former minister P. Chidambara­m’s son Karti as early honorary/independen­t directors).

Minister of state for civil aviation Jayant Sinha said the transactio­ns revealed in the “Paradise Papers” were legal and bona fide. Mr Sinha had worked with Omidyar Network as managing director in India and Omidyar Network had invested in a US company D. Light Design that has a subsidiary in the Cayman Islands, according to a report based on the Paradise Papers investigat­ion. “The transactio­ns were undertaken on behalf of highly-reputed worldleadi­ng organisati­ons in my fiduciary role as partner at Omidyar Network and its designated representa­tive on the D. Light board,” the minister said. “It is crucial to note that these transactio­ns were done for D. Light as an Omidyar representa­tive, and not for any personal purpose,” he noted. Mr Sinha, who is a former venture capitalist, also said all these transactio­ns had been fully disclosed to the relevant authoritie­s through all necessary filings as required. “After leaving Omidyar Network, I was asked to continue on the D. Light Board as an independen­t director... On joining the Union

council of ministers, I immediatel­y resigned from the D. Light board and severed my involvemen­t with the company,” the minister said.

Mr Bachchan too wrote a long blog on Sunday, hours before the “Paradise Papers” were published, explaining that he had always cooperated with the “system”, even though he did not directly refer to the latest leaks.

The CBDT said, meanwhile, that the names of only a few Indians (legal entities and individual­s) had appeared so far in the media. “Even the ICIJ website has not yet released the names and other particular­s of all the entities. The website of ICIJ suggests the informatio­n will be released in phases and structured data connected to the Paradise Papers investigat­ion will be released only in the coming weeks on its Offshore Leaks Database,” it added.

The files were obtained by the German newspaper Süddeutsch­e Zeitung and shared with ICIJ. The new expose comes 18 months after the Panama Papers.

The ICIJ, however, put out a disclaimer that “there are legitimate uses for offshore companies and trusts”, and it does not “intend to suggest or imply that any people, companies or other entities included in the ICIJ Offshore Leaks Database have broken the law or otherwise acted improperly”. The ICIJ also said many people and entities may have similar names and suggested that the identities of those named in the database should be confirmed on the basis of addresses or other identifiab­le informatio­n.

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