UK court rejects Vijay Mallya plea against extradition
Mallya has also the option to appeal against the extradition order in the Supreme Court there.
New Delhi: A UK high court on Monday rejected Vijay Mallya’s plea against extradition to India. He will now face an oral hearing on his appeal against the decision.
The Westminster magistrate’s court had ruled against the 62-year-old businessman, who is wanted in India on charges of not paying back loans worth Rs 9,000 crore, on December 9 last year. Mr Mallya had filed the application seeking “leave to appeal” in the high court on February 14 against his extradition order, which was signed by UK home secretary Sajid Javid.
“The application for permission to appeal was refused by Mr Justice William Davis on 05/04/2019,” said a spokesperson for the UK judiciary. The appellant (Mallya) has five business days to apply for oral consideration. If a renewal application is made, it will be listed before a High Court judge and dealt with at a hearing, the spokesperson added.
Mr Mallya has also the option to appeal against the extradition order in the Supreme Court there.
Mr Mallya’s “leave to appeal” application had been put before Justice Davis, who was to make a decision on the basis of papers submitted as part of the appeals process. Now that the “judge on papers” application has been rejected by Justice Davis, Mr Mallya has the option to “renew his application for permission to appeal” by this Friday. “If he (Mallya) does so (applies for renewal), there will be an oral hearing at which the administrative court (high court) will consider whether or not to grant permission to appeal,” a CPS spokesperson said.
During the oral hearing, Mr Mallya’s legal team and the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) — on behalf of the Indian government — will renew their respective claims for and against an appeal for a judge to determine if it can proceed to a full hearing.
While the rejection by the high court on Friday doesn’t mean that the appeal process in the case has come to an end, the latest decision does move the case one step further in favour of India in bringing back Mr Mallya, who had fled the country in 2016. The latest ruling marks a fresh legal setback for the UB Group chief. Mr Mallya has been based in the UK since March 2016 and remains on bail on an extradition warrant executed by Scotland Yard in April 2017.