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regular-article-logo Saturday, 23 November 2024

Enforcement Directorate questions Congress leader Mallikarjun Kharge

The probe agency has also summoned former Union minister Pawan Kumar Bansal on Tuesday

Our Bureau, PTI New Delhi Published 11.04.22, 09:53 PM
Congress leader Mallikarjun Kharge

Congress leader Mallikarjun Kharge File Picture

The ED on Monday questioned senior Congress leader Mallikarjun Kharge here in connection with a fresh money laundering case to probe alleged financial irregularities in the party-promoted Young Indian that owns National Herald newspaper, officials said.

The Enforcement Directorate (ED) has also summoned former Union minister Pawan Kumar Bansal, who is Associated Journals Limited's managing director and interim treasurer of the Congress party, to appear before it on Tuesday in connection with the case.

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The agency is expected to summon other promoters of Young Indian soon. The first family of the Congress party, including party president Sonia Gandhi and her MP-son Rahul Gandhi, are among the promoters and shareholders of Young Indian.

The National Herald is published by Associated Journals Limited (AJL) and owned by Young Indian Pvt Limited.

Seventy-nine-year-old Kharge, the Leader of Opposition in Rajya Sabha, is currently the CEO of Young Indian and hence summoned to join the investigation, they said.

Kharge was questioned by the ED for about five hours and his statement was recorded under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), officials said.

The federal probe agency has registered the fresh case under the criminal provisions of the PMLA after a trial court here took cognisance of an Income Tax Department probe against Young Indian Pvt Ltd on the basis of a private criminal complaint filed by BJP MP Subramanian Swamy in 2013, sources said.

The ED has been probing AJL and the role of some Congress leaders under the anti-money laundering law since 2016 after taking cognisance of a CBI FIR in the matter.

The agency had earlier alleged that the accused in the AJL case, including former Haryana chief minister and Congress leader Bhupinder Singh Hooda and the late Congress leader Motilal Vora, "used the proceeds of crime" in the form of a land plot allotted ‘illegally’ to AJL in Panchkula and pledged it to avail loan from a Syndicate Bank branch (Bahadur Shah Zafar Marg) in Delhi for constructing a building in Mumbai's Bandra area.

This property, valued at Rs 16.38 crore, was attached by the ED in 2020.

After the ED examined Kharge on Monday, the Congress party’s whip in Lok Sabha Manickam Tagore accused the government of "harassing" him.

Tagore said the government ‘wants to insult Dalit leaders’, and added Kharge would not surrender to such tactics.

BJP MP Swamy had accused Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi and others of conspiring to cheat and misappropriate funds with Young Indian Pvt Ltd paying only Rs 50 lakh to obtain the right to recover Rs 90.25 crore that Associate Journals Ltd owed to the Congress.

The Delhi High Court in February last year had issued a notice to the Gandhis for their response on the plea of Swamy seeking to lead evidence in the matter before the trial court.

They, however, contended in the Delhi High Court that the plea by Swamy was ‘misconceived and premature’.

The other accused in this case filed by Swamy are Suman Dubey and technocrat Sam Pitroda. They have earlier said that they did nothing wrong.

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