Indians in #PanamaPapers list: Aishwarya Rai, Amitabh Bachchan, KP Singh, Iqbal Mirchi, Adani elder brother

Biggest leak of over 11 million documents of Panama law firm features over 500 Indians linked to offshore firms, finds 8-month investigation by a team of The Indian Express led by Ritu Sarin, Executive Editor (News & Investigations).

Ritu SarinP Vaidyanathan IyerJay Mazoomdaar

The Indian Express, 3 April, 2016

Last year, it was Swiss Leaks, a global list with over 1,100 Indians with secret bank accounts in HSBC Geneva, which shaped the debate over black money parked overseas. Now come The Panama Papers. 
More than 11 million documents from the secret files of Mossack Fonseca, a law firm headquartered in tax haven Panama, known for its factory-like production of offshore companies for its worldwide clientele of the well-heeled. These records reveal a list of individuals who have paid the firm — and bought the benefits of the secretive, lax regulatory system in which it operates — to set up offshore entities in tax havens around the world. And Mossack Fonseca’s eagerness to meet their demands, each one for a fee, that helps mask real ownership but still show compliance.
Over 500 Indians figure on the firm’s list of offshore companies, foundations and trusts. There are also 234 Indian passports (handed over by clients as part of the incorporation process), an eight-month-long investigation of over 36,000 files by The Indian Express has revealed. Of these, The Indian Express has checked the authenticity of over 300 addresses.
From film stars Amitabh Bachchan and Aishwarya Rai Bachchan to corporates including DLF owner K P Singh and nine members of his family, and the promoters of Apollo Tyres and Indiabulls to Gautam Adani’s elder brother Vinod Adani. Two politicians who figure on the list are Shishir Bajoria from West Bengal and Anurag Kejriwal, the former chief of the Delhi unit of Loksatta Party.
From Mumbai ganglord the late Iqbal Mirchi, the list includes scores of businessmen with addresses in nondescript neighbourhoods in Panchkula, Dehradun, Vadodara and Mandsaur. Addresses of individuals, in many cases, The Indian Express found out, led to physical locations, but with no trace of the individual. Or, as in one case, belonged to a tenement in a chawl in Mumbai. Not just individuals, a close scrutiny of The Panama Papers by The Indian Express also reveals details of hitherto unknown deals, in some cases involving the government, too.
These include cricket franchise deals and, in several cases, linkages to those who have previously been under CBI or Income Tax scrutiny. As per RBI norms, no Indian citizen could float an overseas entity before 2003 — in 2004, for the first time individuals were allowed to remit funds of up to $25,000 a year under the Liberalised Remittance Scheme, and this limit stands at $250,000 a year now.
But while RBI let individuals buy shares under LRS, it never allowed them to set up companies abroad, having clarified it through an FAQ mid-way in September 2010. In most of the cases in The Panama Papers, companies were set up long before the rules were changed and the purpose, experts said, was to park foreign exchange in a tax haven. It was only in August 2013 that individuals were allowed to set up subsidiaries or invest in joint ventures under the Overseas Direct Investment window. Indeed, records investigated reveal detailed correspondence between Indian tax authorities and those in British Virgin Islands, Seychelles, Panama or other tax havens seeking shareholder, bank account and asset details of offshore companies set up by Mossack Fonseca for Indians.
It is revelatory that authorities in these tax havens had no choice but to depend on Mossack Fonseca for information since, unlike India, the government is not a repository of ownership details. The Panama Papers come at a time when the Special Investigating Team (SIT) on black money headed by former Supreme Court Judge M B Shah is finalising its new action-taken report. The formation of the SIT was the very first decision taken by the Narendra Modi Government in May 2014. The treasure trove of records was accessed by Munich-based newspaper Suddeutsche Zeitung which a year ago collaborated with the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) and, in turn, with over 100 media organisations to investigate its contents. 
In July 2015, The Indian Express signed an agreement with ICIJ for being the Indian partner for The Panama Papers project. Since then, a team of 25 reporters, led by the newspaper’s investigative team, joined 375 journalists in 76 countries. Scouring electronic databases of documents registered in tax havens, joining digital dots (emails, PDF and TIFF files with one document sometimes yielding attachments with hundreds of pages of correspondence, agreements and contracts), cross-referencing company data with lists of names, The Indian Express reporters did field visits across the country to check on addresses mentioned in these records. 
The Indian Express asked each one named whether they had informed RBI or the Income Tax department about these companies. The results of that investigation — that begin in a series starting today — tell a story that’s as much about draconian foreign investment laws as it’s about glaring gaps in the regulatory apparatus. 
The Mossack Fonseca data contains details of entities set up almost four decades ago from 1977 up to those registered just four months ago, that is, December 2015. Clearly, it covers the period when India began signing tax agreements with other countries to accelerate cooperation on undisclosed and untaxed assets. And the years when tracking black money has become the centre of political and economic discourse. 
The worldwide expose also comes just six months after the 90-day “compliance scheme” for declarations of offshore assets and accounts ended on September 30, 2015 and brought just Rs 3,770 crore from 637 declarants. The window now closed, strict penalties and a jail term have been announced for anyone found to have undisclosed and undeclared foreign assets and accounts. 
The Panama Papers is the third successive collaborative project done by The Indian Express with the ICIJ on offshore investments. The first was in 2013, titled “Offshore Leaks.” There were 612 Indians on that list which included two politicians who were then Members of Parliament (including Vijay Mallaya) and several top industrialists. The revelations led to several persons getting tax notices and subsequently being prosecuted for non-declaration of the offshore companies. 
The second ICIJ-The Indian Express collaboration, under the aegis of the French newspaper, Le Monde, was published in February 2015. It was called “Swiss Leaks” and contained data of HSBC (Geneva) account holders — balances dating to 2006-07 — among whom there were 1,195 Indian account holders. Significantly, this was almost double of the 628 names given by the French authorities to the Indian government in 2011 and the scope of the HSBC probe was expanded following the expose. 
Searching 36,957 Needles In An 11-million Haystack 
Given the humongous 2.6 tera byte dump size of Project Prometheus — as the investigation was aptly named — the task was cut out for the team. Tracing Indians in the database comprising over 11 million files and 2,14,488 offshore entities was akin to searching for a needle in a haystack. And all the giga bytes did not come in one go, forcing us to what management experts call ‘fix the aircraft while it flies’. 
In all, the dump finally threw up 36,957 India-related files. Online tools were created to unravel complex web-like linkages between individuals and multiple entities. Internal mails of Mossack Fonseca and legal incorporation documents attached in these revealed not only addresses and passports of individuals, but in some cases also their source of wealth and the intent in setting up offshore entities. 


MoEF’s Toyota Fortuner goes back where it should have been

It is now learnt that on December 21, Sky Packers & Movers, New Delhi, was selected on the basis of a spot quotation for a Rs 44,000-contract to transfer the Fortuner (DL 3C CC 8068) to Bhubaneswar.

The Indian Express, 31 March, 2016

A Toyota Fortuner, being used in New Delhi by Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar though it had been bought by SAIL for field inspection in Odisha by staff of the Ministry of Environment and Forests, was returned to Bhubaneswar within days of The Indian Express seeking comments from the minister last December.
The Indian Express had contacted Javadekar for comments on December 17, 2015. He sought time but neither he nor any official of his ministry replied and the report was published December 22.
It is now learnt that on December 21, Sky Packers & Movers, New Delhi, was selected on the basis of a spot quotation for a Rs 44,000-contract to transfer the Fortuner (DL 3C CC 8068) to Bhubaneswar.
The ministry did not share the file notings on the matter sought through an RTI application — it was filed on February 11 this year — but said the vehicle was “shifted out of Delhi with the approval of the competent authority”. A copy of the financial statement of the contract, obtained under RTI, stated that “spot quotations were invited after obtaining of (sic) approval of SO (GA)”. The SO (GA) refers to a section officer in the general administration division.
Neither Javadekar nor Environment Secretary Ashok Lavasa responded to emails sent Monday by The Indian Express.
In February 2015, the ministry, while granting forest clearance to SAIL’s Barsua iron mines in Odisha, asked the public sector undertaking for a vehicle that the ministry’s Bhubaneswar staff could use for field inspections.
Official records show that within four months, SAIL bought a Rs 20-lakh Toyota Fortuner for the ministry. But this SUV was not sent to the field office. It was delivered in New Delhi where it was being used by Javadekar.

AIIMS asked for IB probe to identify ‘source’ in press reports

The All India Institute of Medical Sciences sought a probe by the Intelligence Bureau (IB) into what it called leak of official documents to the media and their alleged source


The All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) sought a probe by the Intelligence Bureau (IB) into what it called leak of official documents to the media and their alleged source. It was asked by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare to “investigate the matter appropriately”.
On November 30, 2015, AIIMS Deputy Director (Administration) wrote to the Ministry for handing over an investigation into “leakage of official documents from AIIMS” to the IB “for identifying the unnamed source from AIIMS” cited in new reports published in The Pioneer during October-November 2015.
Citing sources, The Pioneer reporter had published several reports on alleged irregularities at AIIMS.
On January 7, the Ministry asked the institute to conduct its own probe. In a letter to the Director of AIIMS, the Ministry’s Director, Amrit Lal, stated that “the matter has been considered in the Ministry. The institute is requested to investigate the matter appropriately. This issues with the approval of Hon’ble HFM.” Six days later, the AIIMS Deputy Director, who had sought an IB probe, wrote another letter in which he alleged that the “case of media leaks of official documents by Shri Sanjiv Chaturvedi is established beyond doubt”. An Indian Forest Service officer on deputation, Chaturvedi has been having a running battle with the Ministry over alleged corruption charges. AIIMS Director M C Misra and Chandan Mitra, Editor of The Pioneer, did not respond to phone calls, text messages and emails for comment.