india

Updated: Jul 02, 2019 20:50 IST

Businessman Vijay Mallya has been permitted to appeal against his extradition order signed off by home secretary, news agency Press Trust of India said after an oral hearing in the appeals court of the England and Wales high court.

The ruling comes as a huge relief to the embattled business tycoon as it was one of the last legal avenues open to him to avoid extradition.

Mallya who founded the now-defunct Kingfisher airlines, fled to Britain in March 2016 after facing accusations of financial irregularities amounting to over Rs 9,000 crore. Mallya has consistently claimed that the charges he faces are baseless and fabricated and the Centre refused to take him up on his offer to clear his loans.

As he walked into the Royal Courts of Justice earlier in the day, the 63-year-old businessman said he was feeling “positive”.

In its order, the bench said that the arguments can be reasonably made on some of Westminster Magistrates’ Court Chief Magistrate Judge Emma Arbuthnot’s conclusions in her prima facie case ruling, according to PTI. The High Court judges ruled that the 63-year-old former Kingfisher Airlines boss was permitted to appeal on only one limited ground to be able to address the admissibility of some of evidence and interpretations made by the lower court.

Mallya’s written application was rejected by Justice William Davis on April 5, prompting him to seek an oral hearing for permission to appeal against home secretary Sajid Javid’s February 4 order extraditing him to India to face allegations of major financial irregularities.

Mallya faces charges of financial irregularities amounting to over Rs 9,000 crore. He has been putting forth his version of events through social media, repeatedly offering to repay all his loans and wondering why the banks are not taking up his offer.

Legal experts had earlier indicated that the court could permit him to appeal if new grounds or evidence not previously considered in lower courts are cited. The Westminster Magistrates Court ruled in favour of Mallya’s extradition in December 2018. Mallya could have moved the Supreme Court, which usually grants permission to appeal only if a case involves a matter of public interest. He could also have approached the European Court of Human Rights, which has jurisdiction over the UK until Brexit is completed and submit a ‘representation’ to the home secretary.