India yesterday said it has asked Britain to deport the embattled former airline boss Vijay Mallya, who faces a money laundering investigation.
Mallya, a part-owner of the Force India Formula 1 team who used to run a liquor empire, left India on March 2 owing more than Rs90bn ($1.3bn) and is believed to be in Britain.
Last week India revoked his passport, after he repeatedly failed to appear before investigators looking into financial irregularities at Kingfisher Airlines, which ceased operating in 2012 leaving millions of dollars in unpaid bills.
“As of today, the ministry has written to the High Commission of the UK in Delhi requesting the deportation of Sri Vijay Mallya so that his presence can be secured for investigations against him under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act 2002,” external affairs ministry spokesman Vikas Swarup told journalists.
Swarup said India had not yet heard back from the British authorities.
An Indian court last week issued an arrest warrant for the 60-year-old, once dubbed the King of Good Times for his lavish lifestyle.
His massive debt has become a symbol of Indian banks’ vast volume of bad loans - meaning in default or close to it - seen as a threat to financial stability in Asia’s third-largest economy.
Critics say the government has not done enough to tackle the issue of wealthy individuals such as Mallya, who obtain huge loans that they later fail to repay.
The Enforcement Directorate, India’s financial crimes agency, has reportedly accused him of siphoning off money from Kingfisher to buy property abroad - a claim the company denies.
“I don’t think they are going to deport him but we have to make an effort, we can’t keep sitting on it,” an ED official said on condition of anonymity.
“If he is deported then once he comes back here he will be arrested at the airport itself.”
On Tuesday, the Supreme Court said details of Mallya’s assets would be shared with the banks chasing him over $1.34bn in unpaid loans, despite his protestations the information should be kept private.
The court said banks should be given details of Mallya’s overseas assets, as well as those of his wife and children, as India’s attorney general branded the absent entrepreneur a “fugitive from justice.”
But in an affidavit filed last week, Mallya, who is a non-resident Indian (NRI), said the banks had no right to demand information about his family’s overseas assets.
“The money involved belongs to banks. Mallya is playing hide and seek with banks and moreover he is a fugitive from justice,” Attorney General Mukul Rohatgi, who is representing the lenders, told the Supreme Court.
Earlier this month, the banks rejected his offer to repay Rs40bn ($600mn) and told the Supreme Court they wanted him to return to India so they could negotiate with him personally over the total owed.
Mallya, traced by Indian reporters to a country residence in Hertfordshire, has said he would comply with the law.
Mallya inherited United Breweries Group from his father at the age of 28 and turned it into one of the world’s largest spirit makers, hosting extravagant yacht parties with Bollywood stars and politicians along the way.
His profile rose further when he acquired a stake in the Force India F1 team and ownership of the Royal Challengers Bangalore cricket team.
The businessman, who is also a member of parliament, has denied absconding and has criticised the media for what he has called a “witch hunt”.
India and Britain have an extradition treaty dating back to 1993.
The British Home Office, which adjudicates in such cases, declined to comment. A spokesman said its policy was neither to confirm nor deny that extradition requests have been made.
Mallya can approach the British authorities to grant him permission to continue his stay in that country or challenge the revocation of his passport.

Related Story