Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Vijay Mallya has applied for ‘another route’ to stay in the UK, says lawyer

Vijay Mallya has applied to home secretary Priti Patel for "another route" to be able to stay in the UK, the liquor tycoon's barrister representing him in bankruptcy proceedings in the High Court of London confirmed during a remote hearing on Friday.

The 65-year-old businessman, whose legal challenge to the Indian government's extradition request was turned down at the Supreme Court level in the UK last year, remains in Britain on bail until Patel signs off on the order for him to be extradited to India to face charges of fraud and money laundering related to the now-defunct Kingfisher Airlines.


The UK Home Office has so far only confirmed on background that a confidential legal process remains ongoing before the extradition order can be executed.

This had raised widespread speculation that Mallya had sought asylum in the UK, details of which are neither confirmed nor denied by the Home Office in Britain while an application is pending.

“The extradition was upheld but he [Mallya] is still here because as you know there is another route for him to apply to the Secretary of State [Patel] for status,” said Mallya’s barrister Philip Marshall, when specifically asked by Deputy Insolvency and Companies Court Judge Nigel Barnett about the status of the extradition proceedings.

It is likely that the reference is to an asylum route which, according to legal experts, would depend upon whether Mallya applied for asylum prior to the extradition request or after.

“He would need to argue much stronger grounds. There are specific rules that detail when asylum is a bar to extradition, it is clear that claiming asylum after all appeals have been exhausted is unlikely to be considered a valid claim to asylum protection,” explains Toby Cadman, co-founder of Guernica 37 International Justice Chambers and a UK-based extradition specialist.

The court on Friday also heard how Mallya, who submitted written evidence for the hearing, was in a "constrained" position as a close relative had passed away as a result of COVID-19.

The remote hearing in the commercial division of the High Court in London was to establish whether the court can sanction substantial sums towards Mallya's living expenses and legal fees from the sale of a French luxury property Le Grand Jardin last year.

The money is held in the UK’s Court Funds Office (CFO) as part of bankruptcy proceedings brought by a consortium of Indian banks led by the State Bank of India (SBI) in pursuit of unpaid loans.

Mallya's legal team argues that he should be sanctioned the required funds to meet mounting legal costs in India and the UK, which includes costs to be paid to the UK's Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) which argued the extradition proceedings on behalf of the Indian authorities.

The lawyers for the banks have challenged this as it would dissipate the funds owed to his creditors towards speculative and "unreasonable" costs while other sources of funds remain available to the businessman.

The hearing forms part of a series as both sides make arguments for and against a bankruptcy order against Mallya in the UK.

More For You

ArcelorMittal

Save Chatham Docks campaigners protest outside the special planning committee meeting

Via LDRS

ArcelorMittal plans to exit Chatham Docks, 85 jobs to be cut

Robert Boddy

Highlights

  • ArcelorMittal Kent Wire consulting on 85 redundancies at Chatham Docks site on Pier Road.
  • Site owner Peel Waters plans to build thousands of homes on docks next to existing 950-home development.
  • Former MP Kelly Tolhurst blames Medway Council for not designating site as commercial dock.

ArcelorMittal Kent Wire has begun consulting on redundancies for 85 employees at its Chatham Docks facility as Europe's largest steel manufacturer prepares to pull out of the Kent site.

The company, based at Chatham Docks on Pier Road, started the consultation process last week with all jobs at the site at risk. A spokesperson said, "We have informed all employees of the decision to enter a consultation process, with all jobs at the site at risk due to the severity and scale of the challenges facing the business."

Keep ReadingShow less