Monday, June 1, 2026
ADVT 
India

Charges 'Preposterous', I'm In 'Forced Exile': Vijay Mallya

Darpan News Desk IANS, 29 Apr, 2016 11:06 AM
    Industrialist Vijay Mallya, at the centre of a controversy in India over alleged loan default of Rs.9,000 crore, has termed the charges against him as "preposterous" and said he was in "forced exile" here from which he would like to return to his country.
     
    "I'm absolutely not guilty of any of the preposterous charges of diverting funds from Kingfisher Airlines and buying properties," Mallya said in an interview to the Financial Times. "I'm in a forced exile, willing to reach reasonable debt settlement."
     
    Questioning the amount of Rs.9,000 crore attributed as wilfull debt against him, the 60-year-old industrialist said by taking away his passport or arresting him, the Indian government and banks won't be able to get any money out of him.
     
    "I definitely would like to return to India. Right now things are flying at me fast and furious. My passport's been revoked. I don't know what the government will do next. I've always said I will like to reach out to the bankers of Kingfisher and make a settlement," he said.
     
    "Notwithstanding the legal proceedings, my offer for settlement stands. The filings before the debt recovery tribunal indicate some 500 million pounds. The rest is toward unapplied interest. I've never been able to understand where this Rs.900 million figure came from," he said.
     
    He said he has issued a sworn affidavit to the Supreme Court and the right position will come to light if a proper probe is conducted. "If the government decides to audit the accounts of Kingfisher airlines, they are not going to find anything -- because that is the truth."
     
    Mallya said "extraordinary pressure" was being exerted on him, but he can't give preference just to banks since there were other creditors as well.
     
     
    "All I can say is that the manner in which my passport was revoked and then suspended was unprecedented and was done in extraordinary haste. I came to know of the facts by email," he said, adding the notice of suspension of his passport came on holiday and that his reply was ignored.
     
    He further said if he has proposed a settlement offer to the apex court, it had to be serious.
     
    Mallya said he tried all that was possible to save Kingfisher Airlines, but in vain. "But I have currently businesses in India, and I wish to continue with them. They are doing very well. I'm currently in forced exile."
     
    As for his lifestyle, often termed as flamboyant, the industrialist said he was a rather simple man. "There is nothing wrong in wearing colourful piece of clothing," he said.
     
    "I think those who need to know certainly know that I have been the brand ambassador. The king of good times was the label for Kingfisher Airlines. I was, for whatever reason, known as the king of good times -- but now obviously, the king of bad times.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    First Pics: Barack Obama Offers 'Chadar' At Ajmer Sharif Dargah Of Khawaja Moinudeen Chishty

    First Pics: Barack Obama Offers 'Chadar' At Ajmer Sharif Dargah Of Khawaja Moinudeen Chishty
    A 'chadar' (sacred cloth) sent on behalf of the people of United State of America and President Barack Hussein Obama, was ceremonially presented at the Dargah Ajmer Sharif on Monday morning.

    First Pics: Barack Obama Offers 'Chadar' At Ajmer Sharif Dargah Of Khawaja Moinudeen Chishty

    Indian-Origin Poet Rajvinder Singh Excels With German Oeuvre

    Indian-Origin Poet Rajvinder Singh Excels With German Oeuvre
    Creative literature is generally linked to a writer's mother tongue. Not so Rajvinder Singh, an Indian-origin poet whose German oeuvre has seen over a hundred articles written on him over the years.

    Indian-Origin Poet Rajvinder Singh Excels With German Oeuvre

    'Suit Boot Ki Modi Sarkar': Rahul Gandhi Attacks Narendra Modi On Land Ordinance, Farmers' Problems

    'Suit Boot Ki Modi Sarkar': Rahul Gandhi Attacks Narendra Modi On Land Ordinance, Farmers' Problems
    A combative Rahul Gandhi here on Monday accused Prime Minister Narendra Modi of "weakening farmers" to the benefit of industrialists with the land bill ordinance, mounting his second successive attack since returning from 56-day leave of absence.

    'Suit Boot Ki Modi Sarkar': Rahul Gandhi Attacks Narendra Modi On Land Ordinance, Farmers' Problems

    Indian Supreme Court Declines PIL For Citizenship To Overseas Indians

    Indian Supreme Court Declines PIL For Citizenship To Overseas Indians
    The Supreme Court on Monday declined a public interest litigation seeking citizenship for the overseas Indians who have acquired foreign nationality, saying the petitioner has no locus standi to make such a plea.

    Indian Supreme Court Declines PIL For Citizenship To Overseas Indians

    US Court Rejects Rajat Gupta's Appeal Against Conviction

    US Court Rejects Rajat Gupta's Appeal Against Conviction
    The US Supreme Court on Monday upheld the 2012 conviction of Rajat Gupta, the former Indian-American director of Goldman Sachs Group, in an insider trading case.

    US Court Rejects Rajat Gupta's Appeal Against Conviction

    Prashant Bhushan and Yogendra Yadav Slam Aap Leaders, Question Disciplinary Action

    Prashant Bhushan and Yogendra Yadav Slam Aap Leaders, Question Disciplinary Action
    Dissident AAP leaders Prashant Bhushan and Yogendra Yadav on Monday replied to the party's show-cause notice for holding an "anti-party" meet, describing it as a "pre-scripted drama where the outcome is already decided and well-known".

    Prashant Bhushan and Yogendra Yadav Slam Aap Leaders, Question Disciplinary Action