Published 10:26 IST, November 30th 2024
'No Bribes Paid...' Adani Group CFO Hits Back On US Court Claims - Full Statement
"We reject all of this strongly on behalf of the individuals," Adani Group CFO Jugeshinder Singh told Reporters.
- Companies
- 3 min read
The finance chief of Adani Group on Friday rejected US allegations that executives, including Chairman Gautam Adani, were part of a $265 million bribery scheme, while the Government said it has not received any US request on the case.
US authorities accused Adani, one of the world's richest people, his nephew and executive director Sagar Adani as well as the managing director of Adani Green, Vneet S Jaain, of being part of a scheme to pay bribes of $265 million to secure solar power supply contracts.
"We reject all of this strongly on behalf of the individuals," Adani Group CFO Jugeshinder Singh told reporters on the sidelines of an event in Mumbai.
"We know for sure, 100 per cent, that nothing of this sort happened. If we were paying that amount of cash to someone I would certainly know, so we know nothing happened," Singh said.
Accused Individuals To Clarify On Allegations
The ports-to-power conglomerate has previously denied the charges, made earlier this month, as "baseless" and vowed to seek "all possible legal recourse".
Singh said that the group would not be taking any action on the US indictment, but that the accused individuals would clarify on the allegations over the next 10 days after seeking legal advice.
He said the allegations made in the US against group chairman Gautam Adani and others including his nephew Sagar Adani is a case of "Unique Use of Prosecutorial Authority" and also made it clear that it is not an attack on the group.
Gautam Adani, Sagar Adani and Vneet Jaain did not immediately respond to Reuters' requests for comment on the CFO's statement.
Singh also sought to allay concerns about any impact from the allegations to the group's expansion plans. "No planned acquisition will be on hold... nothing will impact our investment plans in logistics and energy," he said.
Government’s Reaction
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in the first official reaction to Adani's indictment, said on Friday that bribery allegations against the billionaire was a legal issue between private companies and the US Department of Justice and that New Delhi has not received any request on the case from Washington.
"This is a legal matter involving private firms and individuals and the US Department of Justice," the foreign ministry spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal told reporters at a weekly media briefing. "There are established procedures and legal avenues in such cases which we believe would be followed."
The Indian government was not informed in advance about the indictment and is not part of the "conversation" at this point, Jaiswal said.
Updated 10:50 IST, November 30th 2024