Nirav Modi claims he has no money, borrows ₹10 lakh every month
At present, Nirav Modi is at Wandsworth Prison in southwest London

Nirav Modi, the fugitive Indian diamond merchant has claimed that he has left with no money and will have to borrow some amount to pay the fine to the UK Court.
The former billionaire last year lost his legal battle in the highest UK court against being extradited to India in the estimated $2 billion Punjab National bank (PNB) loan scam.
At present, Nirav Modi is at Wandsworth Prison in southwest London. But his case is now said to be “statute barred", indicating further pending litigation.
The 52-year-old diamond merchant on Thursday appeared via videolink for a hearing at Barkingside Magistrates’ Court in east London over unpaid legal costs, or fines, of 150,247 pounds ordered by the High Court in London, related to his extradition appeal proceedings.
Nirav Modi has reportedly claimed that he has no funds and is resorting to borrowing money to pay the court-ordered legal costs amounting to more than 150,000 pounds ( ₹1,48,05,222).
On being asked how he intended to finance the monthly amount, Nirav told the court he had been borrowing money as he did not have sufficient funds because the Indian government has frozen his assets.
In December last year, a two-judge bench in the Royal Courts of Justice in London refused Nirav Modi’s application for permission to appeal to the Supreme Court on suicide risk grounds and also refused his application to certify a point of law, which concluded his extradition appeal options in the UK courts.
In a final extradition appeal hearing in the case in the London High Court in November 2022, Justices Jeremy Stuart-Smith and Justice Robert Jay ruled that they were “far from satisfied that Mr Modi’s mental condition and the risk of suicide are such that it would be either unjust or oppressive to extradite him".
Their verdict also accepted that the government of India will treat its assurances on Nirav’s medical care after being extradited and held at Barrack 12 of Arthur Road Jail in Mumbai with “appropriate seriousness".
The dismissal of the appeal came three years after Nirav Modi was arrested in March 2019 on an extradition warrant based on Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and Enforcement Directorate (ED) charges against the businessman.
There are three sets of criminal proceedings against the diamantaire in India – the CBI case of fraud on the PNB which caused losses equivalent to over 700 million pounds, the ED case relating to the alleged laundering of the proceeds of that fraud and a third set of criminal proceedings involving alleged interference with evidence and witnesses in the CBI proceedings.
"Exciting news! Mint is now on WhatsApp Channels 🚀 Subscribe today by clicking the link and stay updated with the latest financial insights!" Click here!