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Indian investigators freeze assets in Anil Ambani probe

In recent months, the industrialist has attracted law enforcement scrutiny with investigators probing alleged crimes ranging from diversion of bank loans to money laundering.

Anil Ambani / Courtesy: Wikipedia

India's top financial crimes agency said it had seized properties worth over $846 million from firms linked to beleaguered tycoon Anil Ambani as part of a bank fraud probe.

Anil, the younger sibling of Asia's richest person, Mukesh Ambani, has business interests ranging from power to defense but has seen his fortunes wane over the last two decades.

In recent months, the industrialist has attracted law enforcement scrutiny, with investigators probing alleged crimes ranging from diversion of bank loans to money laundering.

On the evening of Nov. 3, the Enforcement Directorate (ED) said it had frozen assets worth more than 75 billion rupees, including office premises, residential units, and over 132 acres (53 hectares) of land as part of its investigation.

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The agency said it had "detected fraudulent diversion of public money by various Reliance Anil Ambani group companies" and that it was "committed to restituting" the proceeds of these crimes to "their rightful claimants."

The ED also said it had initiated the probe based on a criminal case filed by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) in August.

Reliance Infrastructure, an Anil Ambani-controlled firm, said in a Nov. 3 statement that the ED's decision to seize company assets would have "no impact" on business operations.

The CBI case stems from a fraud complaint received by the State Bank of India, the country's largest lender, which claimed it was hit with a loss of 29.29 billion rupees after Reliance Communications "misappropriated" bank funds.

A Reliance spokesperson said at the time that the tycoon "strongly denies all allegations and charges" and "will duly defend himself."

Anil was last in the public spotlight seven years ago after India's opposition leader Rahul Gandhi accused him and Prime Minister Narendra Modi of dodgy dealings related to the purchase of Rafale jets from France—allegations that both denied.

India's Supreme Court in December 2018 dismissed calls for a probe into the jet deal.

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