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Subrata Roy's Parole Extended, But Court Asks To Deposit ₹300 Crore By 3 August

Either deposit balance of Rs 300 crore or go back to jail.
Subrata Roy, chairman of Sahara Group, holds a cigarette as he speaks during an interview in Lucknow, India, on Monday, May 6, 2013. Roy's closely held Sahara India Pariwar group of companies includes real estate developers, insurers, media assets and sports teams. Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Bloomberg via Getty Images
Subrata Roy, chairman of Sahara Group, holds a cigarette as he speaks during an interview in Lucknow, India, on Monday, May 6, 2013. Roy's closely held Sahara India Pariwar group of companies includes real estate developers, insurers, media assets and sports teams. Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan/Bloomberg via Getty Images

NEW DELHI -- The Supreme Court yesterday extended till 3 August the parole granted to Sahara chief Subrata Roy on humanitarian grounds following the death of his mother, with a strict condition that he will have to deposit the balance of Rs 300 crore, out of the Rs 500 crore promised by him.

"Anyway you have to deposit balance Rs 300 crore. Either you pay or go back to jail," a bench headed by Chief Justice T S Thakur said while reminding him of the 11 May order when he was given a breather for two months to enable him deposit Rs 200 crore with market regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI).

Senior advocate Kapil Sibal, appearing for Roy, was seeking time till the year end for depositing Rs 300 crore but the bench, which also comprised Justices A R Dave and A K Sikri, said "we have already given you a long rope".

It also drew his attention to the history of the case which led to the incarceration of Sahara chief from 4 March, 2014 to 6 May, 2016.

While Sibal was citing difficulties in selling and alienating the properties, the bench said "why don't we appoint a receiver and entrust him all properties".

Besides extension of Roy's parole, Sahara Group also got other much-needed relief with the apex court lifting its embargo on sale and alienation of all other properties other than the 19 already permitted which included mortgaging the 600 acre Aamby Valley in Mumbai and three overseas hotels -- Grosvenor House Hotel in London, the New York Plaza and Dream New York hotels.

The bench allowed the group to go ahead with sale and alienation of all their other properties to raise an amount of Rs 5,000 crore as a bank guarantee they have to deposit in addition to Rs 5,000 crore to get bail for Roy.

It also allowed the group to sell the properties at 90 per cent of the circle rate.

The apex court had passed an order on 29 March stating that SEBI would also not sell any property owned by the beleaguered group for a price less than 90 per cent of the circle rates for the area in question without the permission of the court.

To raise the money, the bench also allowed the group to encash money invested in mutual funds, gold deposits and shares in Natioal Stock Exchange.

Further, the bench accepted Sibal's submission that the group be allowed to transfer the loan of 24 million pounds equivalent to Rs 200 crore it got from overseas investment bankers Reuben Brothers to the SEBI-Sahara account, opened at the apex court's direction for refunding money to investors.

The Sahara group had earlier informed the court that the loan on overseas hotels that was given by Bank of China has been taken over by billionaire brothers David and Simon Reuben of United Kingdom, whose main activities are in real estate, private equity and venture capitalism.

Meanwhile, the bench also granted parole to another Director of the Group, Ravi Shanker Dubey, who was jailed along with Roy and other director Ashok Roy Choudhary.

The day's hearing commenced with Sibal submitting that the 11 May order of depositing Rs 200 crore with the SEBI has been complied with and sought further relief for Roy and his group.

At one point, the bench also suggested that it will appoint a Receiver for selling and alienating all properties, saying "only solution appears to us is to appoint Receiver."

"According to you, your business is already destroyed. We cannot go like this for ever. Don't test our patience. How much time we will spend," the bench observed while reminding the senior advocate about the history of litigation in which Sahara was directed to refund Rs 36,000 crore to investors.

The bench also said "we would not allow our process to be misused" and cautioned that failure to comply with its order would require Roy and other two Directors to surrender and go back to Tihar Jail.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.