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UK court nod for Vijay Mallya to appeal against extradition

I am glad. I won on the prima facie, says 'King of Good Times' post verdict

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In a big relief for embattled liquor baron Vijay Mallya, the Royal Courts of Justice, London, on Tuesday approved his plea to appeal against the extradition case. If the court had ruled against his plea, then Mallya was likely to be extradited to India within 28 days. The plea was heard by a two-judge bench of the Administrative Court Division of the Royal Courts of Justice.

The appeal plea was filed by Mallya in April. Representatives from the Indian High Commission in London were present in court during the hearing. It is to be noted that Mallya had already lost a British High Court "leave to appeal" on paper. An oral hearing will be held on Friday on the renewal application of liquor baron.

In April itself, a UK court had rejected Mallya's plea against extradition to India. He had filed an application in the UK High Court and sought permission to appeal against an extradition order passed by Westminster court.

HUGE RELIEF

  • The London court allowed Vijay Mallya to appeal against extradition order by the Westminster Magistrate’s court on grounds of misrepresentation
     
  • However, the court rejected the argument of Vijay Mallya that he will not get fair trail if he is extradited to India. 

Mallya left India for London in March 2016 and is living in the UK since then. He remains on bail on an extradition warrant which was executed by Scotland Yard in April 2017. In 1992, an Extradition Treaty was signed by India and the UK and the treaty has been in force since November 1993.

Mallya, 63, is wanted in India on fraud and money laundering charges amounting to an alleged Rs 9,000 crore. On Jan 2, Mallya became the first person to be declared a fugitive offender under the Fugitive Economic Offenders Act. A few weeks ago, Mallya had posted a series of tweets and offered "100% payback" to the Indian banks to cover the debt of his now-defunct Kingfisher Airlines. Earlier, Mallya had also claimed that the BJP-led government at the Centre was using the Kingfisher crisis to target the UPA government.

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