Intense hate campaign by Indian media against me knows no bounds. The GOI has filed a case which is before a U.K. court. Wait for verdict. — Vijay Mallya (@TheVijayMallya) 1497401420000

Wide sensational media coverage on my attendance at the IND v PAK match at Edgbaston. I intend to attend all games to cheer the India team. — Vijay Mallya (@TheVijayMallya) 1496710839000

NEW DELHI: After first mocking India saying "keep dreaming about a billion pounds", the on-the-lam loans defaulter Vijay Mallya went on a whine, tweeting that the India media is running an "intense hate campaign" against him."Intense hate campaign by Indian media against me knows no bounds. The GOI has filed a case which is before a U.K. court. Wait for verdict," the 'wilful defaulter' tweeted, on Wednesday India time, a day after a London court pushed back the date of a hearing to decide whether he should be extradited to India.Mallya, who owes Indian banks as much as Rs 9,000 crore, fled India last year in March and has been living in Britain, mostly, since then. After India made a formal extradition request for him in February, he was arrested April 18 by Scotland Yard and released on conditional bail.He's had problems with the Indian media before as well. After the media reported about his brazen appearance at a Champions Trophy cricket match, he tweeted:On Tuesday, Westminster magistrates' court chief magistrate Emma Arbuthnot fixed December 4 for the start of a two-week hearing. Mallya is on bail until that date. The reason Arbuthnot fixed the hearing for a date more than five months away, was because she was told there were delays in evidence arriving from the government of India.The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), which is arguing the case for India, said it hasn't received all the evidence it requires to make a case against Mallya, and on Wednesday asked for more time. This, despite a joint CBI and Enforcement Directorate team visiting London last month with what it said were relevant documents to bolster the CPS lawyers' case.After Tuesday's hearing, the 61-year-old 'wilful defaulter' continued to deny allegations he defaulted on thousands of crores of rupees."You can keep dreaming about a billion pounds; you cannot prove anything without facts," he said to reporters.The fugitive businessman was in the news this week after he was heckled by cricket fans who chanted "chor, chor" (thief, thief) as he arrived to watch the India-South Africa Champions Trophy match at The Oval grounds in London. Last week, he also said on Twitter that he plans to attend all matches India plays in the ongoing Champions Trophy.Mallya also made an appearance at a June 5 fundraising dinner in London held by Indian skipper Virat Kohli who had reportedly not invited him.