{"id":124103,"date":"2021-05-07T02:41:16","date_gmt":"2021-05-07T02:41:16","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/precoinnews.com\/?p=124103"},"modified":"2021-05-07T02:41:16","modified_gmt":"2021-05-07T02:41:16","slug":"was-nirav-modi-tipped-off","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/precoinnews.com\/business\/was-nirav-modi-tipped-off\/","title":{"rendered":"Was Nirav Modi tipped off?"},"content":{"rendered":"

‘One cannot avoid speculating whether there was something else at play that led to the uncovering of this saga.’<\/strong><\/p>\n

Last month the British government agreed to extradite diamond merchant Nirav Modi to India.<\/p>\n

Three years have passed since the Punjab National Bank scam broke out, in which Nirav Modi allegedly siphoned off more than Rs 11,000 crore (Rs 110 billion.<\/p>\n

Modi had fled India in January 2018 one month before the scam was exposed, his whereabouts a mystery until British journalist Mick Brown ran into him on the streets of London.<\/p>\n

Brown’s two-minute video with Modi created an uproar. Modi was arrested and the Narendra Modi government began legal proceedings to have him extradited to India.<\/p>\n

Journalists Danish Khan<\/strong> and Ruhi Khan<\/strong> have covered the Nirav Modi case extensively from London.<\/p>\n

Their recent book — Escaped — True Stories of Indian Fugitives in London<\/em> — covers the Nirav Modi case in detail as well as those of other Indian fugitives who have taken shelter in London, right from liquor baron Vijay Mallya to Bollywood composer Nadeem Saifi, an accused in the 1997 murder of music magnate Gulshan Kumar.<\/p>\n

In an e-mail interview with Rediff.com<\/em><\/strong>‘s Syed Firdaus Ashraf<\/strong>, Danish and Ruhi Khan discuss the Nirav Modi case and the possibility of him actually getting extradited to India.<\/p>\n

The concluding segment of a two-part interview:<\/p>\n