Ritu Sarin Posted online: Sun Jun 16 2013, 03:57 hrs
New Delhi : The Indian government has obtained data of investments made by hundreds of Indians in tax havens such as the British Virgin Islands, the Cook Islands and Cayman Islands, some of which was part of a global media expose on offshore investments and secret financial transactions two months ago.
The Central Board of Direct Taxes has begun examining the information.
The data about entities, registered by Indians through international financial service providers such as Portcullis Trustnet (PTN) of Singapore and the Commonwealth Trust Limited (CTL) in the British Virgin Islands, was provided by the Australian taxation office using the Tax Information Exchange Agreement.
Top government sources told The Sunday Express that tax authorities in Australia, Britain and the US had received identical data about such offshore investments, and they had decided they would share intelligence and documents which hint at suspected tax avoidance with other countries according to their jurisdiction. Subsequently, Indian authorities made a formal request for the data, sources said.
In the biggest global expose of its kind, an international group of investigative journalists had reported in April that they had found details of over 1.2 lakh offshore entities and trusts belonging to individuals and companies in more than 170 countries and territories, including India.
The data was obtained by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), which had collaborated with 38 media organisations around the world, including the The Indian Express, to analyse the documents.
The information showed that 612 Indians were among the thousands who had opened offshore entities through the CTL and PTN trusts. The 612 Indians included two members of Parliament — Lok Sabha Congress MP Vivekanand Gaddam and RS member Vijay Mallya — and several industrialists such as Ravikant Ruia, Samir Modi, Chetan Burman, Abhey Kumar Oswal, Rahul Mammen Mappillai, Teja Raju, Saurabh Mittal and Vinod Doshi.
Following the report, Finance Minister P Chidambaram had said inquiries had been “put in motion” about the names exposed by The Indian Express.
CBDT officials said that following the expose, each of the Indians named had been questioned about the companies registered in the tax havens. “While some of the persons named said they enjoyed NRI status and thus could not be questioned on tax liabilities, others denied any knowledge about entities attached to their name. Only one or two persons acknowledged that they had indeed registered companies in tax havens. We are still in correspondence with them,” a top official said.
With tax authorities now in possession of the entire data about the companies and trusts registered by Indians, the task of assessing tax avoidance in hundreds of cases is expected to become more daunting. However, unlike the sketchy details of bank accounts opened by 700-odd Indians in the HSBC bank in Geneva, information about the tax haven accounts includes data such as incorporation documents, names and addresses of beneficial owners and nominees and in many cases, correspondence and emails with the Indians.
The CBDT’s scrutiny of the offshore account data comes at a time when the ICIJ is itself releasing on Saturday an interactive database of more than 100,000 secret companies and trusts created in offshore locations.
ICIJ probe: List of Indians in tax havens
Express news service : New Delhi, Sun Jun 16 2013, 13:15 hrs
New Delhi : There are 612 Indians on the list exposed by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists for offshore investments and secret financial transactions. The ICIJ has now developed a global database of such companies and individuals.
These databases were parts of two larger separated databases that had been fed for nearly30 years by two companies: Singapore-based Portcullis TrustNet (PTN), and Commonwealth Trust Limited (CTL), based in the British Virgin Islands (BVI).
Both firms specialise in setting up offshore financial structures. They have helped tens of thousands of people create offshore companies and trusts, as well as hard-to-trace bank accounts.
The data were obtained by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, which chose The Investigative Unit at La Nacion to process it and to develop the interactive application of the most ambitious cross-border investigative project in history.
Here is a list of Indians mentioned in the database:
1. NAME: ABHAY CHOKSI & SIDHARTH CHOKSI
OFFSHORE ENTITY: BLUE MIST INTERNATIONAL
2. NITIN PANCHMAL
ENTITY: ENCORA GROUP, INC.
3. ROHITASHWA PODDAR
ENTITY: GAINFUL HARVEST INC.
4. RASHMI KIRTILAL MEHTA AND BHAVIN RASHMI MEHTA
ENTITY: BAPAJI INC.
5. DESAI LAXMIKANT YESHWANT
ENTITY: I-MOS PACIFIC LIMITED
6. SWATI GAUTAM ALLAHBADIA
ENTITY: ADMIRAL VIEW MANAGEMENT INC.
7. GAUTAM NAND ALLAHBADIA
ENTITY: ADMIRAL VIEW MANAGEMENT INC.
8. DALAL MALAVICKA RAMESH
ENTITY: GRAND HARVEST MANAGEMENT LIMITED
9. DALAL RAMESH SITALDAS
ENTITY: GRAND HARVEST MANAGEMENT LIMITED
10. ANOOP VRAJLAL MEHTA
ENTITY: BLUE JAYS PRIVATE LIMITED
11. KETANKUMAR SHANTIKUMAR MEHTA
UNIQUE CHOICE INVESTMENTS OVERSEAS LTD
12. HENA KHANNA
ENTITY: RESONUS ADVISORS (HK) LIMITED
13. MANISH KUMAR MATADEEN LATH
ENTITY: ZINFANDEL ENTERPRISES LIMITED
14. ARUN KUMAR DALMIA
ENTITIES: IN-SIGHT OVERSEAS OFFSHORE LIMITED AND WATERVIEW INTERNATIONAL GROUP CORPORATION
15. HARSH KUMAR DALMIA
ENTITIES: IN-SIGHT OVERSEAS OFFSHORE LIMITED AND WATERVIEW INTERNATIONAL GROUP CORPORATION
16. SHAIRUL SHAILESH MEHTA
ENTITY: DISTAR ASSETS LIMITED
17. MADHU SUDAN JALAN
ENTITY: GOLDEN WEALTH MANAGEMENT LIMITED
18. MANILAL BHANABHAI
ENTITIES: GLOBAL FINANCE CONSULTANTS LIMITED
PACIFIC FALCON LIMITED
FORTUNE EXPRESS FINANCE LIMITED
19. DHANGAVRI M. BHANABHAI
ENTITY: GLOBAL FINANCE CONSULTANTS LIMITED
20. KAUTILYA BANDESH KUMAR SHARMA
ENTITY: GIRA INVESTMENTS LIMITED
21. KANWAR VEERAJAN NATH
ENTITY: LONG WALK WORLDWIDE LTD
22. KAVEESH NATH
ENTITY: LONG WALK WORLDWIDE LTD
23. DIPAK KUMAR PODDAR
ENTITY: GAINFUL HARVEST INC.
24. KESHAV RAMNIK TANNA
ENTITY: DOUBLE TOP VENTURE LTD
25. SHASHI RAMNIK TANNA
ENTITY: DOUBLE TOP VENTURE LTD
26. RAVINDER BHAGWANDAS DEVIDASANI
ENTITY: DAFFODIL INVESTMENTS GROUP LIMITED
27. KIRAN KOCHAR
ENTITY: EVERBLOOM INVESTMENTS HOLDINGS LTD
28. AGYA SINGH KOCHAR
ENTITY : EVERBLOOM INVESTMENTS HOLDINGS LTD
29. MINI SINGH
ENTITY : EVERBLOOM INVESTMENTS HOLDINGS LTD
30. SANJAY GOEL AND ANJALEE SANJAY GOEL
ENTITY : KEYSTONE UNIVERSAL LTD
31. NARENDRA DHARMASINH DESAI
ENTITY : APAR INVESTMENTS, INC.
32. CHAITANYA NARENDRA DESAI
ENTITY : APAR INVESTMENTS, INC.
33. KUSHAL NARENDRA DESAI
ENTITY: APAR GLOBAL HOLDING TECHNOLOGIES CORP.
34. CHETAN NAVIN SHAH & SONALI CHETAN SHAH
ENTITY: DISTINCTIVE IDEA INCORPORATED
35. JAYSHREE ANUJKUMAR RATHI
ENTITY: PURPLE HUES INCORPORATED
36. HEMANT HANSRAJ KENIA
ENTITY: SHARP VISION INVESTMENTS OVERSEAS LIMITED
37. CHAULA VIMAL PODDAR
ENTITY: WYNVEL GLOBAL CORPORATION
38. RAVINDRA NATH GUPTA
ENTITY: ESSAR STEEL VIETNAM HOLDINGS PRIVATE LIMITED
39. VIMAL PODDAR
ENTITY: WYNVEL GLOBAL CORPORATION
40. MEENAKSHI JATIA
ENTITY: PALAZZO INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT LTD
41. SAKET AGARWAL
ENTITY: CONTIBULK HOLDINGS LIMITED
42. ARCHANA AGARWAL
ENTITY: CONTIBULK HOLDINGS LIMITED
43. RAJKUMAR MODI
ENTITY: ACROTERIA CORPORATION
44. NITIN NATH
ENTITY: WILDWOOD WORLDWIDE LTD
45. ARUN KUMAR SRIVASTAVA
ENTITY: ESSAR POWER OVERSEAS LIMITED
46. RAJIV BHARAT SHAH
ENTITY: GOLDEN LAUNCH INVESTMENTS LTD
47. MECCA NISAR AHMED
ENTITY: GRAND EMPIRE GROUP LTD
48. ROHINI MANGHARAM TALREJA AND TANYA MANGHARAM TALREJA
ENTITY: PERSIAN ROSE INVESTMENTS LTD
49. RAKESH KULDIP SINGH WADHAWAN AND SARANG WADHAWAN
ENTITY: MYSTICAL INTERNATIONAL WORLDWIDE LTD
50. GAUTAM ASHOK CHOKSI
ENTITY: ASIAN REAL ESTATE CAPITAL LTD
51. SADEESH RAGHAVAN MANIKOTHRAGHAVAN
ENTITY: HIGH PLAINS INTERNATIONAL LTD
52. MUDHIT GUPTA
ENTITY: EMGEE PROPERTIES LIMITED
53. MADHAV ARVIND GOGTE
ENTITY: ORIENTAL SUCCESS UNIVERSAL CORPORATION
54. VIJAY KUMAR RAICHAND
ENTITY: LONGSHORE INVESTMENTS GROUP LTD
55. MAHENDRAKUMAR POONAMCHAND KOTHARI
ENTITY: SKYWEST INTERNATIONAL LIMITED
56. RAMESH KUMAR SACHDEV
ENTITY: GROWEALTH UNIVERSAL CORPORATION
57. RAJU KARAMCHANDANI AND SARA RAJU KARAMCHANDANI
ENTITY: DYNAMIC SOLO INVESTMENTS LTD
58. PARUL DEVEN SARKAR
ENTITY: FAME GATE INTERNATIONAL LIMITED
59. DEVEN RATANCHAND SARKAR
ENTITY: FAME GATE INTERNATIONAL LIMITED
60. BHARAT PTAMBER PUNJABI
ENTITY: WINGLORY TRADING LIMITED
61. AMI RASHESH BHANSALI
ENTITY: GOLD JEWEL CORPORATION
62. RESHMA MOTIRAM DADLANI
ENTITY: SUNNY BLESSING HOLDING INC.
63. ANJANA HARESH VASWANI
ENTITY: SUNNY BLESSING HOLDING INC.
64. MOTI THANWERDAS DADLANI
ENTITY: SUNNY BLESSING HOLDING INC.
65. VISHAL DADLANI
ENTITY: SUNNY BLESSING HOLDING INC.
66. ANAND KUMAR KANODIA
ENTITY: BUSINESS MAGNET INTERNATIONAL LTD
67. SANJIV MAHESHWARI
ENTITY: EPHESUS CORPORATION
68. RAVIKANT RUIA
ENTITY: ORION WORLDWIDE UNIVERSAL CORPORATION
69. KALPESH SHANTIKUMAR MEHTA
ENTITY: UNIQUE CHOICE INVESTMENTS OVERSEAS LTD
70. RAVINDRA FOTEDAR
ENTITY: ROYALL PURPLE INTERNATIONAL LTD
71. SANDEEP DHIRAJLAL DHAKAN
ENTITY: ROTHBURY WORLDWIDE INC.
72. SANJAY BIJAYKUMAR SARAF
ENTITY: ROSEWOOD INTERNATIONAL GROUP LIMITED
73. PERNENDU BOSE
ENTITY: CONQUER MEDIA OVERSEAS LTD.
74. RASESH MANHARKUMAR BHANSALI
ENTITY: GOLD JEWEL CORPORATION
75. RESHMA RAJIV MEHTA
ENTITY: GOLDEN LAUNCH INVESTMENTS LTD
76. RAHUL UDAY TULJAPURKAR
ENTITY: RIVAGE ENERGY CORPORATION
77. HEENA CHAUHAN
ENTITY: RIVAGE ENERGY CORPORATION
78. SUNDIP RAMJI MEHTA
ENTITY: EDEN PEAK OVERSEAS LTD
79. PALLAVI ANIRUDHA JOSHI
ENTITY: UNION PINE INVESTMENT LIMITED
80. ANIRUDHA BALKRISHNA JOSHI
ENTITY: UNION PINE INVESTMENT LIMITED
81. KOKILA RATANCHAND SARKAR
ENTITY: MAIN CROWN MANAGEMENT LIMITED
82. AJAY MADAN
ENTITY: CROWN MATE CONSULTANTS LIMITED
83. SANJEEV KANWAR
ENTITY: UNOCAL CORPORATION
84. SUMIT KUMAR JAVERI
ENTITY: GLAMOUR RING OVERSEAS LTD
85. RAKESH KUMAR BHARTIA
ENTITY: VIOLACEA ENTERPRISES LTD
86. VISHAL SINGH
ENTITY: MANGAL MURTI LIMITED
87. KUMAR SEVANTILAL JAVERI
ENTITY: GLAMOUR RING OVERSEAS LTD
88. JASH PASTA
ENTITY: JASH PASTA, BRICK JOINT PTE. LTD.
89. ARVIND BALKRISHNA GOGTE
ENTITY: GLEAMING SNOW WORLDWIDE LTD
90. PANKAJ KIRTILAL MEHTA
ENTITY: DIMENSION WORLDWIDE LTD
91. DIYA GARG
ENTITY: PERFECT OPULENCE LIMITED
92. AMARENDRA MORESHWAR LAUD
ENTITY: SWAN BELL INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION
93. KALPANA MORESHWAR LAUD
ENTITY: SWAN BELL INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION
94. PRASHANT MORESHWAR LAUD
ENTITY: SWAN BELL INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION
95. RICHA SAXENA KARPE
ENTITY: CAPITAL ALPS UNIVERSAL LTD
96. SACHIN SURENDRA KARPE
ENTITY: CAPITAL ALPS UNIVERSAL LTD
97. BHOJU ALIAS SADHU PHULWANI
ENTITY: GOLD EASTERN LTD
98. HARISH KUMAR MITTAL
ENTITY: METAPHOR ENTERPRISE LTD
99. RANGANATH THOTA
ENTITY: CONTESTS2WIN CHINA HOLDINGS LIMITED
100. NEERAJ KHANNA
ENTITY: FIRST GLOBAL CAPITAL INC.
Global media investigation finds 612 Indian firms in tax havens
Ritu Sarin Posted online: Thu Apr 04 2013, 04:18 hrs
New Delhi, Washington : In the biggest global expose of its kind on offshore investments and secret financial transactions, an international group of investigative journalists has found details of more than 1.2 lakh offshore entities and trusts belonging to individuals and companies in more than 170 countries and territories, including India.
These individuals and companies include politicians, the mega rich and tax offenders, among others, who have invested in tax havens such as the British Virgin Islands, the Cook Islands, Samoa and other offshore hideaways.
The 612 Indians in this list include two members of Parliament — Lok Sabha Congress MP Vivekanand Gaddam and RS member Vijay Mallya — and several industrialists such as Ravikant Ruia, Samir Modi, Chetan Burman, Abhey Kumar Oswal, Rahul Mammen Mappillai, Teja Raju, Saurabh Mittal and Vinod Doshi.
The list also includes businessmen who have had a brush with authorities such as the Income-Tax department and the CBI. Several of the offshore investments were made in possible violation of RBI and FEMA rules.
Details of these transactions were contained in 2.5 million secret files and accounted for more than 260 gigabytes of data. They were obtained by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) and their total size is more than 160 times larger than the leak of the US State Department documents by Wikileaks in 2010.
Based in Washington DC, ICIJ (www.icij.org) is an independent network of reporters who work together on cross-border investigations.
ICIJ collaborated with 38 media organisations around the world, including the The Indian Express, for this ambitious global project and to analyse the documents. The other media partners include The Washington Post in the US, The Guardian and BBC in Britain, Le Monde in France and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.
The secret files provide facts and figures — cash transfers, incorporation dates, links between companies and individuals — that illustrate how financial secrecy has spread aggressively around the globe. They represent the biggest stockpile of inside information about the offshore system ever obtained by a media organisation.
Besides several well-known Indians, the lists include American doctors and dentists, middle-class Greek villagers as well as families and associates of long-time despots, Wall Street swindlers, East European and Indonesian billionaires, Russian corporate executives and international arms dealers.
These people used international financial services providers such as the Portcullis Trustnet (PTN) of Singapore and the Commonwealth Trust Limited (CTL) in the British Virgin Islands to register offshore companies in tax havens. PTN and CTL, it has been found, have helped tens of thousands of people set up off-shore companies, personal financial trusts and hard-to-trace bank accounts.
Anti-corruption campaigners argue that offshore secrecy undermines law and order and forces average citizens to pay higher taxes to make up for revenues that vanish offshore. The stolen asset recovery initiative, a programme of the Wold Bank and the United Nations, has estimated that cross-border flows of global proceeds of financial crimes total between $1 trillion and $ 1.6 trillion a year.
On the other hand, offshore defenders counter that most offshore patrons are engaged in legitimate business transactions. Offshore centres, they say, allow companies and individuals to diversify their investments, force commercial alliances across national borders and do business in entrepreneur-friendly zones that eschew the heavy rules and redtape of the onshore world.
The 15-month long investigation has found that alongside perfectly legal transactions, the secrecy and lax oversight offered by the offshore world allows fraud, tax dodging and political corruption to thrive. The expose has also thrown light on the functioning of “nominee directors’’ in offshore companies, several of whom have also been engaged by Indian patrons of offshore companies.
For instance, a cluster of 28 “sham directors’’ have been identified as having served as the on-paper representatives of more than 21,000 companies between them, with some individual directors representing as many as 4,000 companies each.
The expose comes shortly after a list of 18 Indians who had bank accounts in the LGT Liechtenstein Bank and around 700 Indians who had accounts in HSBC in Geneva became public. In both cases, account holders were prosecuted and paid penalties to Income-Tax authorities for deposits they had made abroad without paying taxes in India.
Incidentally, India had signed a double taxation treaty called the Tax Information Exchange Agreement with the BVI in 2011 to check tax evasion and money laundering from the tax haven. Finance ministry officials said that similar agreements are in the process of being drafted with the Cook Islands and Samoa.
While the Liberalized Remittance Scheme 2012 permits Indians to deposit up to $200,000 abroad annually, the RBI has made it clear that this does not include deposits in tax havens. “As yet, the $200,000 facility for remittances abroad is not applicable for individuals to open accounts or companies in tax havens,” a RBI spokesperson told The Indian Express.
Auditors said the legality of holding offshore accounts and registering offshore companies is complex. The RBI restriction on individuals incorporating companies abroad, they said, can be easily circumvented if an offshore company is first incorporated and the shareholding then transfered to the beneficial owner.
In the cases under scrunity, documents show that both patterns have been followed. The date of incorporation and the date of the patrons being appointed shareholders/directors is either identical — which is a violation of RBI guidelines — or is a month or so later. If it is the latter, these individuals can say they just acquired shares of an offshore company.
However, with individuals debarred from using LRS for setting up companies, even the remittance dispatched by them for setting up an offshore entity can be a violation. Under rules of the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), the use of the offshore route to bring in FDI is also prohibitted and is a violation of Section 8 of the act.
There is also a restraint on individuals setting up offshore companies without the prior approval of the RBI.
MEGA BYTES
* 15-month investigation based on 260 GB data in 2.5 million secret files including 2 million emails covering nearly 30 years
* Data had details of over 1.2 lakh offshore firms/trusts and 12,000 agents
* Owners, benefactors of offshore accounts spread across more than 170 countries, territories
* 86 ICIJ journalists from 38 media organisations in 46 countries collaborated in investigation
* Data found 28 ‘sham directors’ who together represented 21,000 firms
Indian Express-ICIJ probe: Vijay Mallya, Ravikant Ruia in tax havens
Ritu Sarin Posted online: Thu Apr 04 2013, 04:10 hrs
The 612 Indians on the list of those who have invested in tax havens such as the British Virgin Islands include two MPs, a former royal and top industrialists. RITU SARIN puts together details of 20 among them
SONU LALCHAND MIRCHANDANI
Mirchandani is the founder of popular consumer electronics firm Onida. Mirchandani and his wife, Soni, opened a BVI company called Strong Wing Overseas Ltd in 2006 with an authorised capital of $50,000. Both are directors and shareholders of the company.
Mirchandani, however, said he did not recall opening such a BVI entity. “The personal details in the papers are mine. Maybe someone else has opened the company in my name,” he said when shown the documents.
Investigation finds 612 Indian firms in tax havens
TEJA RAJU
Teja is the eldest son of Ramalinga Raju, the disgraced former chairman of Satyam Computers Ltd. Teja is said to be the brain behind Maytas Infrastructure, whose planned merger with the software giant went on to unravel the alleged corporate fraud that sent Ramalinga Raju to jail for 32 months.
The Rajus set up two BVI companies, Global Network Overseas and Stapley Universal Limited. Teja Raju is listed as the beneficial owner of both but records show their current status as “defunct”. Each company was registered with an authorised capital of $50,000.
Teja Raju denied any link with the companies. “Looks like a case of mistaken identity,” he said.
RAVIKANT RUIA
An NRI, Ruia is vice-chairman of the Essar group, which has interests in steel, oil, gas and power. His company has been embroiled in the alleged irregularities in the telecom spectrum allocation of 2001-02; last month, a special court named Ruia an accused.
He has registered three firms in the BVI and his daughter Smiti is a shareholder in two of them. Also, one of Ruia’s flagship companies, Essar Power, has five BVI accounts with their authorised capitals ranging from $100 to $100,000.
Essar officials said that of the eight companies, five were liquidated in 2011 and 2012 and three are “existing and operational”. They said necessary filings and compliance have been done in India in accordance with laws and Smiti has declared her holding in Paprika Properties Ltd and Paprika Holdings Management Ltd in her wealth tax returns. “These companies were started as SPVs to make investments and are in the knowledge of the authorities concerned,” Essar said.
RAMAKRISHNA KARUTURI
Bangalore-based Karuturi is the chairman of Karuturi Global Ltd, the largest producer of cut-roses in the world. He has diversified into farming and has leased 300,000 hectares of land in Ethiopia to produce cereals and edible oil.
In 2007, Karuturi registered companies in tax havens and with huge authorised capitals. He is shareholder or beneficial owner of six companies that have a collective authorised capital of $2.2 million. His wife, Anitha, is also a shareholder in one company, Maxworth Investment Ltd.
Reached in Ethiopia, Karuturi said he did not recall the companies and did not respond to subsequent calls.
VIJAY MALLYA
The other MP on the list, Mallya registered a BVI company called Venture New Holding in 2006 with an authorised share capital of $50,000. Mallya, who has been in the news for the trouble over his Kingfisher Airlines and with the tax authorities, is the beneficial owner of the firm.
“Dr Mallya is a non-resident Indian with business activities in different parts of the world. It is common practice to use BVI registered companies in connection with such activities which are not confined to India alone. All disclosures in regard to Dr Mallya’s wealth have been duly made to Parliament,” a UB group spokesperson said.
VIVEKANAND GADDAM
Gaddam is a Congress MP from the Peddapalle reserved constituency in Andhra Pradesh. The seat was earlier represented by his father, former union minister G Venkatswamy. Gaddam, who has a MBBS degree, is an industrialist and owns asbestos firm Visaka Industries. He is also chairman of CII’s Andhra Pradesh chapter.
Gaddam and his wife, Saroja, became directors and shareholders of British Virgin Islands (BVI) company Belrose Universal Ltd in 2009. The address mentioned in documents is the official Hyderabad address that is also mentioned in his Parliamentary records.
Reached for his comment, Gaddam said he was not aware of the existence of any such offshore company. “I do not remember being involved with such a company and have no connection with it,” he said.
ABHEY KUMAR OSWAL
Son of Ludhiana-based business tycoon Vidya Sagar Oswal, Abhey is chairman of Oswal Agro Mills and Oswal Chemicals and Fertilizers and managing director of Oswal Spinning and Weaving Mills. In 1999, tax authorities raided his establishments for suspected evasion.
He is one of the biggest Indian players on the BVI list. Starting in 2006, he registered 11 companies in Samoa and the BVI and controlled them through the Rising Wealth Trust, registered in the Cook Islands. While the trust owns shares in several of the companies, Abhey owns shares in others. Abhey is the protector of the trust and his son Shael is the settler. The combined authorised capital of the 11 companies is $5.3 million.
“I have not registered any offshore firms. You must be in the knowledge of business entities of my son Shael Oswal, who is a Singapore resident and an NRI. My companies or myself have no relation whatsoever with his business or business entities,” Abhey said.
SAMIR MODI
Son of top industrialist K K Modi, who owns the diversified Modi Enterprises, Samir is an executive director in Godfrey Philips. He pushed the group’s diversification by launching a string of new ventures such as Modicare, Colorbar and Twenty Four Seven.
His BVI company is called Gilvin Rock Enterprise Limited. He and his wife, Shivani, are joint directors and shareholders in the firm ,which has an authorised capital of $50,000. “The company was set up as a route for investments but hasn’t done any business or trade transactions,” he said.
CHETAN BURMAN
Chetan Burman is a fifth-generation member of the Burman family, which owns the Rs 1,500 crore ayurvedic and food products brand Dabur. He was executive director of Dabur Nepal but has now branched out into other ventures.
Burman registered a BVI company in 2007 called Heavenly Bloom World Ltd. He is both director and shareholder of the company, which started with an authorised capital of $50,000.
Burman said the BVI firm was set up to route exports, mainly of honey, through Singapore but that plan didn’t take off. “The company was set up through a verbal communication since I wanted to make Singapore the export hub for my products. But no trade transactions actually materialised and the company has thus remained dormant,” he said.
GAEKWAD RADHIKARAJE SAMARJITSINH
In January 2008, members of the former royal family of Baroda opened a BVI firm with an authorised capital of $50,000. The directors and shareholders of the company, called Brentwood Consulting Limited, are Gaekwad Radhikaraje Samarjitsinh, wife of Samarjitsinh Gaekwad, and her sister Kumari Meenal. The Laxmi Vilas Palace, one of the largest residences in the country, is given as Radhikaraje’s address in documents.
She did not respond to questions sent to her.
RAHUL MAMMEN MAPPILLAI
The founder of MRF Tyres, the late K M Mammen Mappillai, was among those on the list of 18 people who had accounts in the European tax haven of Liechtenstein. It has now come to light that members of the MRF family registered a BVI company, Moon Mist Enterprise Limited, in 2007 with an authorised capital of $50,000. Its directors are Mammen Mappillai’s two sons, MRF chairman Kandathil Mammen and its MD Arun Mammen. Kandathil’s son Rahul Mammen Mappillai, also an MRF director, is the third shareholder.
Rahul did not respond to questions sent to him.
GURBACHAN SINGH DHINGRA
Dhingra is vice-chairman of Berger Paints, the second largest paint manufacturer in the country. In the BVI, Dhingra is the beneficial owner of a company called Crossley Hill Corporation. It was incorporated in 2008 with an authorised capital of $50,000.
Dhingra, however, denied any links with the company. “I have nothing to do with this company even though the address being quoted by you is my address. You must have got wrong documentation,” Dhingra said.
RASHMI KIRTILAL MEHTA & BHAVIN RASHMI MEHTA
The Mehtas are prominent Mumbai-based diamond traders, with a base in Belgium, and are facing allegations and action for parking money in offshore accounts. Rashmi is the son of patriarch Kirtilal Mehta and Bhavin is Rashmi’s son. Some of their relatives, including Rashmi’s brother Prabodh Mehta, were named in the list of 18 Indians who had accounts in the LGT Liechtenstein Bank. In April 2011, the family was raided by tax authorities and their tax evasion cases are under assessment.
Rashmi and Bhavin are directors and shareholders in a BVI company called Bapaji Inc. The company was incorporated in 2004. Another BVI company, called Dimension Worldwide Ltd, is linked to the Mehta family but its status is described as “defunct”.
The Mehtas did not respond to questions sent to them in Belgium.
LANKALINGAM MURUGESU & REETA LANKALINGAM
Known as the Papad King, Murugesu is the chairman of the Lanson Group, involved in the manufacture and export of papads. The group also owns Lanson Toyota, a Toyota car dealership of which Reeta, Murugesu’s wife, is the joint MD. They also own a biotech firm called Lanson Biotech involved in ayurvedic research.
Murugesu and Reeta are joint shareholders in a Hong Kong-registered Portcullis TrustNet company called Ready On Company Limited. The company was “sold” to the couple in 2008 and began with an authorised capital of HK $10,000.
Murugesu confirmed having set up the company. “We started the company for better tax planning but with full tax now required to be paid by export units like ours, no trading through it really materialised. We just thought it is better to pay full taxes,” he said.
THIAGARAJAN MURUGESAN
Breaking away from his family business of cotton trading and textiles, Murugesan launched the now-defunct Paramount Airways, a niche airline catering to the southern sector, and was its MD at the age of 28. He started five BVI companies in 2008, each with an authorised capital of $50,000. He is director and shareholder in all of them.
Thiagarajan confirmed the existence of the five BVI companies but clarified that they are “wholly owned” subsidiaries of Indian companies of the Paramount group and not individual holdings. “The BVI companies were opened with the aim of getting foreign investments in the textile business but that did not happen. So these are just companies on paper with very little or hardly any capital. Since the investments did not come in we did not activate the companies,” he said.
MAITREYA VINOD DOSHI
Doshi is the chairman of Premier Ltd, formerly Premier Automobiles Ltd, one of India’s oldest automobile manufacturers. He opened a BVI company called McGuffin Ltd in 2006 with an authorised share capital of $50,000 and is named as the beneficial owner.
“McGuffin Ltd has invested FDI in our Indian company with prior approval of the RBI. We regularly file all the required disclosures with the RBI as per their rules. All details of McGuffin have been given to the income-tax authorities as part of my local company’s routine tax assessment, including audited balance sheets, shareholders list certified by auditors and details of investments made by it. All remittances by McGuffin have been made through HDFC Bank after due KYC checks,” Doshi said.
YASHOVARDHAN LOHIA
Lohia is the CEO of Chamong Tee Exports, one of India’s largest tea exporters. Lohia registered Golden Charm Universal and Golden Success Offshore Inc in the BVI in 2007 but these are now shown as “defunct”.
Lohia did not respond to questions sent to him.
MEENAKSHI JATIA
One of the three daughters of the late jute baron Arun Bajoria, Meenakshi and her husband Sharad Kumar Jatia are among the claimants to Bajoria’s empire, valued at Rs 2,500 crore and the subject of family disputes.
The couple are named jointly as directors and shareholders in two BVI companies, Supreme Bonus Enterprises Limited and Plazzo International Management Ltd. Each was acquired in 2007-2008 with an authorised capital of $50,000. She did not respond to questions.
SAURABH MITTAL
Mittal is a co-founder and vice-chairman of Indiabulls, the country’s first e-commerce and Internet brokerage company.
BVI documents show Mittal registered a company named Alta Vista Development Corporation in 2008. He is both director and shareholder in the company, which began with an authorised capital of $50,000. He did not respond to questions put to him.
NEESHA SUNIT KHATAU, PANNA SUNIT KHATAU & REENA SUNIT KHATAU
They are heirs to the 150-year old Khatau empire. Panna is the wife of Sunit Khatau, the late chairman of the group who was shot dead in 1994. She is chairman of their flagship textile firm, Khatau Makanji Spinning and Weaving Company. Neesha and Reena are her daughters and directors of the company.
In 2007, the three registered four companies in the BVI through Portcullis TrustNet and are either together or individually named as beneficial owners of the firms. In each case, the authorised capital is $50,000. Neesha did not respond to questions sent to her.
How international journalists' team analysed offshore files
SONU LALCHAND MIRCHANDANI
Mirchandani is the founder of popular consumer electronics firm Onida. Mirchandani and his wife, Soni, opened a BVI company called Strong Wing Overseas Ltd in 2006 with an authorised capital of $50,000. Both are directors and shareholders of the company.
Mirchandani, however, said he did not recall opening such a BVI entity. “The personal details in the papers are mine. Maybe someone else has opened the company in my name,” he said when shown the documents.
Investigation finds 612 Indian firms in tax havens
TEJA RAJU
Teja is the eldest son of Ramalinga Raju, the disgraced former chairman of Satyam Computers Ltd. Teja is said to be the brain behind Maytas Infrastructure, whose planned merger with the software giant went on to unravel the alleged corporate fraud that sent Ramalinga Raju to jail for 32 months.
The Rajus set up two BVI companies, Global Network Overseas and Stapley Universal Limited. Teja Raju is listed as the beneficial owner of both but records show their current status as “defunct”. Each company was registered with an authorised capital of $50,000.
Teja Raju denied any link with the companies. “Looks like a case of mistaken identity,” he said.
RAVIKANT RUIA
An NRI, Ruia is vice-chairman of the Essar group, which has interests in steel, oil, gas and power. His company has been embroiled in the alleged irregularities in the telecom spectrum allocation of 2001-02; last month, a special court named Ruia an accused.
He has registered three firms in the BVI and his daughter Smiti is a shareholder in two of them. Also, one of Ruia’s flagship companies, Essar Power, has five BVI accounts with their authorised capitals ranging from $100 to $100,000.
Essar officials said that of the eight companies, five were liquidated in 2011 and 2012 and three are “existing and operational”. They said necessary filings and compliance have been done in India in accordance with laws and Smiti has declared her holding in Paprika Properties Ltd and Paprika Holdings Management Ltd in her wealth tax returns. “These companies were started as SPVs to make investments and are in the knowledge of the authorities concerned,” Essar said.
RAMAKRISHNA KARUTURI
Bangalore-based Karuturi is the chairman of Karuturi Global Ltd, the largest producer of cut-roses in the world. He has diversified into farming and has leased 300,000 hectares of land in Ethiopia to produce cereals and edible oil.
In 2007, Karuturi registered companies in tax havens and with huge authorised capitals. He is shareholder or beneficial owner of six companies that have a collective authorised capital of $2.2 million. His wife, Anitha, is also a shareholder in one company, Maxworth Investment Ltd.
Reached in Ethiopia, Karuturi said he did not recall the companies and did not respond to subsequent calls.
VIJAY MALLYA
The other MP on the list, Mallya registered a BVI company called Venture New Holding in 2006 with an authorised share capital of $50,000. Mallya, who has been in the news for the trouble over his Kingfisher Airlines and with the tax authorities, is the beneficial owner of the firm.
“Dr Mallya is a non-resident Indian with business activities in different parts of the world. It is common practice to use BVI registered companies in connection with such activities which are not confined to India alone. All disclosures in regard to Dr Mallya’s wealth have been duly made to Parliament,” a UB group spokesperson said.
VIVEKANAND GADDAM
Gaddam is a Congress MP from the Peddapalle reserved constituency in Andhra Pradesh. The seat was earlier represented by his father, former union minister G Venkatswamy. Gaddam, who has a MBBS degree, is an industrialist and owns asbestos firm Visaka Industries. He is also chairman of CII’s Andhra Pradesh chapter.
Gaddam and his wife, Saroja, became directors and shareholders of British Virgin Islands (BVI) company Belrose Universal Ltd in 2009. The address mentioned in documents is the official Hyderabad address that is also mentioned in his Parliamentary records.
Reached for his comment, Gaddam said he was not aware of the existence of any such offshore company. “I do not remember being involved with such a company and have no connection with it,” he said.
ABHEY KUMAR OSWAL
Son of Ludhiana-based business tycoon Vidya Sagar Oswal, Abhey is chairman of Oswal Agro Mills and Oswal Chemicals and Fertilizers and managing director of Oswal Spinning and Weaving Mills. In 1999, tax authorities raided his establishments for suspected evasion.
He is one of the biggest Indian players on the BVI list. Starting in 2006, he registered 11 companies in Samoa and the BVI and controlled them through the Rising Wealth Trust, registered in the Cook Islands. While the trust owns shares in several of the companies, Abhey owns shares in others. Abhey is the protector of the trust and his son Shael is the settler. The combined authorised capital of the 11 companies is $5.3 million.
“I have not registered any offshore firms. You must be in the knowledge of business entities of my son Shael Oswal, who is a Singapore resident and an NRI. My companies or myself have no relation whatsoever with his business or business entities,” Abhey said.
SAMIR MODI
Son of top industrialist K K Modi, who owns the diversified Modi Enterprises, Samir is an executive director in Godfrey Philips. He pushed the group’s diversification by launching a string of new ventures such as Modicare, Colorbar and Twenty Four Seven.
His BVI company is called Gilvin Rock Enterprise Limited. He and his wife, Shivani, are joint directors and shareholders in the firm ,which has an authorised capital of $50,000. “The company was set up as a route for investments but hasn’t done any business or trade transactions,” he said.
CHETAN BURMAN
Chetan Burman is a fifth-generation member of the Burman family, which owns the Rs 1,500 crore ayurvedic and food products brand Dabur. He was executive director of Dabur Nepal but has now branched out into other ventures.
Burman registered a BVI company in 2007 called Heavenly Bloom World Ltd. He is both director and shareholder of the company, which started with an authorised capital of $50,000.
Burman said the BVI firm was set up to route exports, mainly of honey, through Singapore but that plan didn’t take off. “The company was set up through a verbal communication since I wanted to make Singapore the export hub for my products. But no trade transactions actually materialised and the company has thus remained dormant,” he said.
GAEKWAD RADHIKARAJE SAMARJITSINH
In January 2008, members of the former royal family of Baroda opened a BVI firm with an authorised capital of $50,000. The directors and shareholders of the company, called Brentwood Consulting Limited, are Gaekwad Radhikaraje Samarjitsinh, wife of Samarjitsinh Gaekwad, and her sister Kumari Meenal. The Laxmi Vilas Palace, one of the largest residences in the country, is given as Radhikaraje’s address in documents.
She did not respond to questions sent to her.
RAHUL MAMMEN MAPPILLAI
The founder of MRF Tyres, the late K M Mammen Mappillai, was among those on the list of 18 people who had accounts in the European tax haven of Liechtenstein. It has now come to light that members of the MRF family registered a BVI company, Moon Mist Enterprise Limited, in 2007 with an authorised capital of $50,000. Its directors are Mammen Mappillai’s two sons, MRF chairman Kandathil Mammen and its MD Arun Mammen. Kandathil’s son Rahul Mammen Mappillai, also an MRF director, is the third shareholder.
Rahul did not respond to questions sent to him.
GURBACHAN SINGH DHINGRA
Dhingra is vice-chairman of Berger Paints, the second largest paint manufacturer in the country. In the BVI, Dhingra is the beneficial owner of a company called Crossley Hill Corporation. It was incorporated in 2008 with an authorised capital of $50,000.
Dhingra, however, denied any links with the company. “I have nothing to do with this company even though the address being quoted by you is my address. You must have got wrong documentation,” Dhingra said.
RASHMI KIRTILAL MEHTA & BHAVIN RASHMI MEHTA
The Mehtas are prominent Mumbai-based diamond traders, with a base in Belgium, and are facing allegations and action for parking money in offshore accounts. Rashmi is the son of patriarch Kirtilal Mehta and Bhavin is Rashmi’s son. Some of their relatives, including Rashmi’s brother Prabodh Mehta, were named in the list of 18 Indians who had accounts in the LGT Liechtenstein Bank. In April 2011, the family was raided by tax authorities and their tax evasion cases are under assessment.
Rashmi and Bhavin are directors and shareholders in a BVI company called Bapaji Inc. The company was incorporated in 2004. Another BVI company, called Dimension Worldwide Ltd, is linked to the Mehta family but its status is described as “defunct”.
The Mehtas did not respond to questions sent to them in Belgium.
LANKALINGAM MURUGESU & REETA LANKALINGAM
Known as the Papad King, Murugesu is the chairman of the Lanson Group, involved in the manufacture and export of papads. The group also owns Lanson Toyota, a Toyota car dealership of which Reeta, Murugesu’s wife, is the joint MD. They also own a biotech firm called Lanson Biotech involved in ayurvedic research.
Murugesu and Reeta are joint shareholders in a Hong Kong-registered Portcullis TrustNet company called Ready On Company Limited. The company was “sold” to the couple in 2008 and began with an authorised capital of HK $10,000.
Murugesu confirmed having set up the company. “We started the company for better tax planning but with full tax now required to be paid by export units like ours, no trading through it really materialised. We just thought it is better to pay full taxes,” he said.
THIAGARAJAN MURUGESAN
Breaking away from his family business of cotton trading and textiles, Murugesan launched the now-defunct Paramount Airways, a niche airline catering to the southern sector, and was its MD at the age of 28. He started five BVI companies in 2008, each with an authorised capital of $50,000. He is director and shareholder in all of them.
Thiagarajan confirmed the existence of the five BVI companies but clarified that they are “wholly owned” subsidiaries of Indian companies of the Paramount group and not individual holdings. “The BVI companies were opened with the aim of getting foreign investments in the textile business but that did not happen. So these are just companies on paper with very little or hardly any capital. Since the investments did not come in we did not activate the companies,” he said.
MAITREYA VINOD DOSHI
Doshi is the chairman of Premier Ltd, formerly Premier Automobiles Ltd, one of India’s oldest automobile manufacturers. He opened a BVI company called McGuffin Ltd in 2006 with an authorised share capital of $50,000 and is named as the beneficial owner.
“McGuffin Ltd has invested FDI in our Indian company with prior approval of the RBI. We regularly file all the required disclosures with the RBI as per their rules. All details of McGuffin have been given to the income-tax authorities as part of my local company’s routine tax assessment, including audited balance sheets, shareholders list certified by auditors and details of investments made by it. All remittances by McGuffin have been made through HDFC Bank after due KYC checks,” Doshi said.
YASHOVARDHAN LOHIA
Lohia is the CEO of Chamong Tee Exports, one of India’s largest tea exporters. Lohia registered Golden Charm Universal and Golden Success Offshore Inc in the BVI in 2007 but these are now shown as “defunct”.
Lohia did not respond to questions sent to him.
MEENAKSHI JATIA
One of the three daughters of the late jute baron Arun Bajoria, Meenakshi and her husband Sharad Kumar Jatia are among the claimants to Bajoria’s empire, valued at Rs 2,500 crore and the subject of family disputes.
The couple are named jointly as directors and shareholders in two BVI companies, Supreme Bonus Enterprises Limited and Plazzo International Management Ltd. Each was acquired in 2007-2008 with an authorised capital of $50,000. She did not respond to questions.
SAURABH MITTAL
Mittal is a co-founder and vice-chairman of Indiabulls, the country’s first e-commerce and Internet brokerage company.
BVI documents show Mittal registered a company named Alta Vista Development Corporation in 2008. He is both director and shareholder in the company, which began with an authorised capital of $50,000. He did not respond to questions put to him.
NEESHA SUNIT KHATAU, PANNA SUNIT KHATAU & REENA SUNIT KHATAU
They are heirs to the 150-year old Khatau empire. Panna is the wife of Sunit Khatau, the late chairman of the group who was shot dead in 1994. She is chairman of their flagship textile firm, Khatau Makanji Spinning and Weaving Company. Neesha and Reena are her daughters and directors of the company.
In 2007, the three registered four companies in the BVI through Portcullis TrustNet and are either together or individually named as beneficial owners of the firms. In each case, the authorised capital is $50,000. Neesha did not respond to questions sent to her.
How international journalists' team analysed offshore files
SIVASANKARAN and Many CHIDAMBARAMs
brings out
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