The central probe agency said it has carried out the action under the recently introduced section 37A(1) of the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) that empowers it to seize equivalent property in India, if there is a suspicion that any forex, foreign security or any immovable property located outside India is held in contravention of the Act.
This is the first action under FEMA in the HSBC black money list.
Officials said the ED began probing a case against Kothari in respect of credit of foreign exchange to the tune of USD 352,258 (about Rs 2.2 crore at present) that was "held" in the HSBC Bank, Geneva and was "suspected to be held outside India and thereby contravened the provisions of FEMA".
"During investigations, it was admitted that (this) amount was kept in the foreign accounts without proper permission from RBI and without declaring the same to tax authorities. Further, he (Kothari) could not produce any evidences to show that the said amount was repatriated to India," the agency said in a statement.
"Accordingly, ED has seized Rs 1.59 crore of Kothari, held in his demat account with Axis Bank Ltd, Mylapore branch, Chennai under the provisions of Section 37A of FEMA," it said.
The case pertains to 628 Indians, who figured on a list of account holders in HSBC's Geneva branch that India had obtained from the French government in 2007.
The ED had got these documents from the court after the Income Tax Department, which first obtained and probed the names on the list on charges of tax evasion, filed its prosecution in these cases.
Through the recent changes in the FEMA, the ED has been empowered to seize equivalent property in India, if there is a suspicion that any forex, foreign security or any immovable property located outside India is held in contravention of the Act.
This section or amendment was brought in FEMA in 2015 as part of the Union government's strategy to combat black money stashed abroad.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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