Published Date: 03-03-2009
Type: Report
Source Date: 01-03-2009

Once again, a spokesperson for Vedanta Resources plc, the much-reviled UK 
mining company, has boasted that the company is on track to become the world's 
biggest aluminium producer..

This is not a new claim and seems designed, both to reassure flagging 
investors, and pressure the Indian government to quell opposition to Vedanta's 
vital Nyamgiri bauxite mine project in Orissa, currently stalled by a peoples' 
blockade.

The company claims that it is losing half a crore rupees (just under 100 
million US dollars) "every day" due to the delays.

But this is perhaps of less concernt than the distinct air of corruption that 
has recently descended on Vedanta and its board.

Vedanta's executive chairman, Anil Agarwal, and other officers of the company, 
are facing indictment for allegedly cashing a 12 billion dollar bank guarentee, 
provided for construction of an aluminium township.

The company is having problems over the proposed amalgamation of its 51%-owned 
Sesa Goa Ltd - India's biggest iron ore exporter - with a subsidiary company of 
Sesa Goa, now also being accused of fraud.

Then, at the end of last week, SK Tamotia , who's been a non-executive director 
of Vedanta since 2004, was sentenced to three years in jail for illegal 
possession of funds.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Police slap case against Vedanta

Times of India

28th Feburary 2009

HYDERABAD: The police have registered a case against the chairman of the 
Vedanta Aluminium Limited for allegedly duping Maytas Infra Limited to the tune 
of Rs 64 crores.

Responding to a private complaint by Y Tagore, deputy general manager of Maytas 
Infra Limited, the XIV additional chief metropolitan magistrate, here,had 
directed the Punjagutta police on Tuesday to register a case against Vedanta 
Aluminium Limited.

According to Punjagutta SI [Superintendent of Police] , Ravinder Reddy, in the 
year 2007, Vedanta Aluminium Limited, Mumbai, entered into a Memorandum of 
Understanding (MoU) with the Maytas Infra Limited over a Rs 232 crore township 
construction work in Jharsuguda of Orissa.

"As a part of the deal, Maytas Infra management furnished Rs 64 crore worth 
bank guarantees issued by ICICI Bank to Vedanta Aluminium Limited. Now they 
allege that, Vedanta has illegally encashed the Rs 64 crore bank guarantee," 
Ravinder Reddy said.

Acting on the direction from the court, Punjagutta police registered a case 
under sections 403, 406 and 420 of the IPC against - Anil Agarwal, chairman, 
Navin Agarwal, vice-chairman, and seven others of Vedanta Aluminium Limited. 
The police have launched an investigation into the case.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Vedanta lines up Rs 60,000cr investment by 2013

Dillip Satapathy / Kolkata/ Bhubaneswar

Business Standard (India)

26th February 2009

The Anil Agarwal promoted Vedanta Aluminium (VAL) plans to invest a whopping Rs 
60,000 crore in aluminium, alumina and power sector in Orissa by 2013.

The company has recently completed the construction of a one million tonne 
alumina refinery at Lanjigarh in Kalahandi district and is currently engaged in 
establishing a 0.5 million tonne aluminium smelter and 1215 Mw captive power 
plant (CPP) at Jharsuguda.

It has already invested about Rs 25,000 crore in these two projects and intends 
to make additional Rs 35,000 crore investment to scale up the operation of both 
the units over next four years.

The investment plan of the company is in tune with its aim to have 2.6 million 
tonne aluminium capacity under its belt by 2013. Of this envisaged capacity, 
the Jharsuguda unit is expected to contribute 1.6 million tonne while the rest 
one million tonne will come from Korba plant of the company.

Similarly, the CPP capacity at Jharsuguda is projected to be ramped up to 3,600 
Mw while the capacity of the alumina smelter at Lanjigarh will be expanded from 
one million tonne to 5 million tonne by this time.

The new investments also include setting up of a 2400 Mw independent power 
plant also at Jharsuguda.

"Once this is done, the Jharsuguda plant will be the world's largest single 
location smelter with a capacity to produce 1.6 million tonne of aluminium", 
says P.K. Panda, vice-president, Mines, Vedanta Aluminium. Dubal in United Arab 
Emirates is currently the world's single largest site aluminium smelter with 
installed capacity of 0.9 million tonnes.

At Jharsuguda, the company is nearing completion of the first phase of the 
smelter project comprising 2,50,000 tonnes of aluminium capacity. Of 288 pots 
to be installed in the first phase 216 pots have been commissioned and the 
balance will go on stream by June this year. Similarly, out of 675 Mw of 
captive power required in the first phase, 540 Mw (4X135 Mw) capacity has been 
commissioned.

Though the construction of the company's one million tonne alumina refinery at 
Lanjigarh is complete since October, 2007, the company is currently operating 
only one stream of refining process, out of two streams installed there, due to 
problems in sourcing bauxite. "We are operating at 50 per cent of capacity at 
Lanjigarh, producing 60,000 tonne of alumina per month, pending operation of 
captive bauxite mines in Niyamgiri Hills nearby", Panda added.

To keep the unit running, the company is procuring bauxite from all over the 
country and in the process, incurs a loss of half a crore of rupees every day 
on present scale of operation. The mining in Niyamgiri had run into rough 
weather with litigation over forest, environment and tribal issues. However, 
with the Supreme Court recently clearing the mining project, the company 
expects to start bauxite mining in joint venture with Orissa Mining Corporation.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

HC sets aside Sesa Goa merger

Times of India

27th February 2009

PANAJI: A division Bench of the Bombay high court at Goa set aside a single 
Bench judgment that sanctioned the scheme of amalgamation of Sesa Industries 
Limited (SIL) with Sesa Goa Limited (SGL).

The order comes in wake of an appeal filed by Krishna Bajaj, a shareholder of 
the company (SIL), against the single Bench order passed on December 18, 2008.

The appellant pointed out that SIL had suppressed the fact that an 
investigation was being carried out against it. It also suppressed the fact 
that there was an adverse report against it while obtaining the sanction. It 
was also submitted that after amalgamation the company (SIL) would be dissolved 
and no action against it would be maintainable.

SIL's counsel J J Bhat on the other hand said that when most of the 
shareholders had approved the scheme, it cannot be said that the company had 
defrauded and suppressed facts from the shareholders. A division Bench 
comprising Justice P B Majmudar and Justice C L Pangarkar held, "We are of the 
opinion that the scheme in question cannot be sanctioned by this court as it is 
in violation of mandatory provision of Section 394 of the Companies Act."


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Former NALCO chief jailed for three years in graft case

Times of India

27th February 2009

BHUBANESWAR - A court in Orissa Thursday sentenced a former chief of 
state-owned National Aluminium Company Ltd (NALCO) to three years in jail in a 
graft case, his lawyer said.

The court of special Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) judge at Bhubaneswar 
sentenced S.K. Tamotia on the charge of possessing disproportionate assets 
worth Rs.900,000), his lawyer Nirmal Patnaik told IANS.
Tamotia held numerous positions at NALCO from 1984 until 1996, including as its 
chairman and managing director.

After resigning from NALCO, Tamotia also held key positions in many premier 
organisations and companies in the country including Hindustan Aluminium 
Company Ltd (Hindalco) and Vedanta.

The CBI had raided his house soon after he left NALCO in 1996 and filed a 
charge sheet against him three years later in the CBI court, the lawyer said.

‘The judge Srikanta Nayak held Tamotia guilty and sentenced him to three years 
imprisonment. He also fined him Rs.50,000,' Patnaik said, adding that they will 
appeal the judgement in the high court.



Source: http://www.minesandcommunities.org/article.php?a=9091

Also see - http://www.survival-international.org/news/4373

SURVIVAL INTERNATIONAL PRESS RELEASE

30 March 2009


TROUBLES MOUNT FOR VEDANTA: OECD ACCEPTS SURVIVAL COMPLAINT AS CHAIRMAN FACES FRAUD INQUIRY


UK mining giant Vedanta Resources was dealt a double blow today as the OECD agreed that all the complaints made by Survival about the company’s planned bauxite mine in Orissa merit further consideration, and Indian police investigate fraud allegations against the company’s billionaire chairman Anil Agarwal.

The OECD complaints procedure exists to investigate claims that companies are breaking international guidelines for multinational enterprises. Survival has submitted a complaint that Vedanta is pushing ahead with a massive bauxite mine in Orissa on the land of the remote Dongria Kondh tribe even though they have never been consulted, and will be destroyed by it.

Vedanta sought to have the complaint thrown out, but the OECD’s ‘UK National Contact Point’ has now accepted that there is a case to answer.

In a further setback for the company, police in the state of Andhra Pradesh are investigating allegations of fraud against Vedanta subsidiary Vedanta Aluminium Ltd, its chairman Anil Agarwal, his brother Navin Agarwal and seven other directors. Anil Agarwal is also the chairman of parent company Vedanta Resources, and owns most of its shares. The inquiry centres on allegations that Vedanta Aluminium cashed a $12 billion bank guarantee provided for the construction of a workers’ township.

Survival’s Director, Stephen Corry, said today, ‘This is a wake-up call for Vedanta and all multinationals that ignore their duty of care to tribal people affected by their projects. The law is clear: indigenous peoples must be consulted and their views must be respected. Vedanta cannot plough ahead with this mine, ignoring the strong protests from local people and the rights of the Dongria Kondh.’


ENDS

1. A copy of the Initial Assessment of the OECD’s UK National Contact Point is available at: http://www.berr.gov.uk/whatwedo/sectors/sustainability/nationalcontactpoint/page45873.html

2. The OECD (Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development) is a grouping of thirty, mostly Western, countries, formed to promote ‘democracy and the market economy.’ See http://www.oecd.org
 
 


 


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