Mukesh Ambani’s East West Pipeline in money laundering row

The Asian Age.

Business, In Other News

The pipeline project, it said, was implemented by a consortium of independent contractors from India, China, Russia and the Middle East.

Mukesh Ambani

New Delhi: Dutch investigators have arrested three former employees of a local firm suspected of laundering $1.2 billion through over-invoicing services and works rendered for a gas pipeline built by a unit controlled by Mukesh Ambani, a charge vehemently denied by Reliance Industries.

Dutch publication Cobouw later reported that the three suspect were released on Friday after three days. It said the susepcts’ lawyers stated that the magistrate decided that they are no longer required to be detained for questioning.

East West Pipeline (EWPL), which was previously known as Reliance Gas Transportation Infrastructure (RGTIL), denied that any money was laundered at any stage during implementation of the project and that higher capital cost of a pipeline would result in higher tariff for users for receiving natural gas through the line.

Ambani's listed firm Reliance Industries too denied any link to the pipeline company saying it neither set up any gas pipeline in 2006 nor did it have contracts with any Netherlands company for any  gas line.

The Fiscal Intelligence and Investigation Service & Economic Investigation Service (FIOD-ECD) arrested three former employees of Dutch pipeline firm A Hak, alleging that an estimated $1.2 billion in profits earned by the company through over-invoicing services and works rendered to RGTIL were "creamed off" to Singapore-based Bio-metrix Marketing Ltd, a company they claim is linked to Reliance.

An AFP report quoting a statement issued by public prosecutor's office said that the company acted as "invoice duplicator" to enable the Indian firm to claim costs twice from gas customers. "It is suspected that the Dutch company used to increase the amounts on the invoices for the materials and services supplied," it said.

"The 'profits' earned in this way were later creamed off via the Dutch company," it said.

The gains were then transferred via a complex web of businesses based, among other places, in Dubai, Switzerland and the Caribbean, before eventually ending up at a business owned by the Indian company in Singapore, AFP said adding the suspects allegedly received payments of up to $10 million for their involvement.

"In this case Dutch companies are suspected of assisting an Indian client to launder suspected illegal earnings," AFP quoted from the statement. The real losers "were probably individual citizens in India" as the cost of production of gas is passed onto the consumer, it added.

Reached for comments, EWPL said the pipeline project was built by a privately owned entity, in which promoters' private funds were invested.

"No public funds were invested and all borrowings from banks, financial institutions and others have been fully repaid by the promoters.

“We strongly deny any suggestion of any money having been laundered at any stage during the implementation of the project. Suggestion of such impropriety lacks logic and economic rationale and is emphatically denied," EWPL said.

The pipeline project, it said, was implemented by a consortium of independent contractors from India, China, Russia and the Middle East. "A Hak, Middle East was one of the contractors. The project was completed expeditiously at globally competitive costs which have been benchmarked by reputed independent agencies."

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