London: The Indian government on Wednesday reiterated its accusation that Vijay Mallya willfully misrepresented the financial health of the now-defunct Kingfisher Airlines, as the fraud-accused liquor baron's appeal against his extradition to India continued at the High Court in London.
The government - represented at the hearing by the UK's Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) - insisted that there was overwhelming evidence of fraud and deception on Mallya's part in the saga surrounding the collapse of Kingfisher Airlines in 2012.
It follows arguments yesterday and early this morning by Mallya's legal representatives.
The tycoon's lead counsel Clare Montgomery had described the case as complex and dense and claimed that the magistrate who ordered Mallya's deportation to face charges in India - judge Emma Arbuthnot, sitting at Westminster Magistrate - had misunderstood or misinterpreted many of the circumstances that led to the grounding of Kingfisher Airlines.
Read Also:Mallya arrives for UK Court appeal against extradition to India