• Wednesday, April 24, 2024

HEADLINE STORY

Gupta brothers are still South African citizens, says its home minister Motsoaledi 

South African home affairs minister Aaron Motsoaledi. (Photo by ALEXANDER JOE/AFP via Getty Images)

By: Shubham Ghosh

A week after South Africa said the United Arab Emirates turned down its request to extradite two brothers from the wealthy Indian-origin Gupta family to face trial over fraud and corruption charges, its government claimed Rajesh and Atul Gupta are still its citizens using the country’s passports.

It said this amid reports that the duo acquired citizenship of Vanuatu, an island-nation in the South Pacific Ocean east of Australia.

The three Gupta brothers, Ajay, Atul and Rajesh are wanted in South Africa for their alleged roles in the looting of billions of rands from state enterprises. They are alleged to have used their proximity to former South African president Jacob Zuma for their gains. The family fled to Dubai five years ago as the law-enforcement agencies closed in on them following Zuma’s ousting by his own African National Congress.

“The Guptas are using South African passports, I just can’t tell when, because when you are a South African passport (holder) away from us, we won’t know. Our movement control system doesn’t show if you crossed into China (or anywhere else). It doesn’t show,” the country’s home affairs minister Aaron Motsoaledi said on Friday (14).

The minister was reacting to media reports that the Guptas were now citizens of Vanuatu.

Hailing from Saharanpur in northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, the Guptas built an empire in information technology, media and mining industries after arriving in South Africa in 1993 to start a shoe shop.

Last week, South African justice minister Ronald Lamola said his government was “shocked and dismayed” after the UAE declined the request to extradite the Gupta brothers to face trial in South Africa on fraud and corruption charges.

Motsoaledi said the Guptas had acquired their passports irregularly from a corrupt home affairs official against whom action had been taken.

But the department has no plans yet to cancel their passports or revoke the citizenship of the Guptas as an appeal to the UAE on the extradition request would then be meaningless, Motsoaledi said.

“We can’t take back the passport before we take away the citizenship. We must start there. We are chasing them because we believe they belong to us. So, if we take away that citizenship, do we still have any rights?” the minister said.

A report in the Vanuatu Daily Post said Vanuatu’s Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) had advised Vanuatu’s Citizenship Office on the hostile information against the corruption-accused fugitive brothers on two separate occasions in 2018.

The report said the Vanuatu Citizenship Office and the Department of Immigration have declined to confirm or deny whether the Guptas are currently residing in Vanuatu.

Previous reports indicated that the Guptas were seeking asylum in the African nations of Cameroon and the Central African Republic.

(With PTI inputs)

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