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Regular-article-logo Thursday, 29 May 2025

Yash Birla on Swiss list

Industrialist Yash Birla and son-in-law of late realty and liquor baron Ponty Chadha are among seven Indians with Swiss bank accounts whose names have been made public in Switzerland's official gazette with regard to ongoing tax probes against them in India.

TT Bureau Published 27.05.15, 12:00 AM

Berne/New Delhi, May 26 (PTI): Industrialist Yash Birla and son-in-law of late realty and liquor baron Ponty Chadha are among seven Indians with Swiss bank accounts whose names have been made public in Switzerland's official gazette with regard to ongoing tax probes against them in India.

Two Mumbai-based individuals named in the famous City Limousines scam, a Delhi-based businesswoman Ritika Sharma and two others - Sneh Lata Sawhney and Sangita Sawhney - are the other Indians whose names have been made public.

The names of these seven "Indian nationals" have been published in Switzerland's Federal Gazette with regard to details sought about them by the Indian authorities.

Among these, some details have already been shared by the Swiss Federal Tax Administration (FTA) with India, including about Birla and Sharma of Blessings Apparel, according to the gazette notifications.

In case of Sayed Mohamed Masood, being probed for a major Ponzi scheme run from Mumbai through City Limousines, some details were shared by Swiss authorities in the past. His accounts were also frozen a few years ago following a request from the enforcement directorate.

Fresh details about him and about Chaud Kauser Mohamed Masood have been sought by the Indian authorities, according to the notifications published in Switzerland's official gazette.

While asking the named persons to appeal within 30 days, the notifications mention the names and date of birth of all the seven, including Gurjit Singh Kochar, who is married into the Chadha family and is said to be outside India now.

The notifications for Birla and Sharma also mention their Mumbai and Delhi addresses, respectively. Welcoming the Swiss government's move, finance minister Arun Jaitley said this should serve as a "sufficient indicator" to those with unaccounted wealth abroad about the action to follow.

Speaking to reporters in Ahmedabad, he said the era of tax havens had come to an end and it was no longer safe to keep assets abroad illegally.

The Yash Birla group later said in an e-mailed statement that he had "no individual bank account in his name or under his control" and this position had been communicated to the Indian tax authorities.

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