India clears sale of 'enemy shares' held by people who
moved to Pakistan
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[November 09, 2018]
By Sanjeev Miglani
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India's government
said it will sell stocks worth millions of dollars seized from people
who moved to Pakistan following partition in 1947 and the wars since, as
a way to make up for a shortfall in revenues.
The stocks worth at least 30 billion rupees ($412.26 million) are part
of what India calls "enemy properties" that once belonged to people who
went to Pakistan and China, with which India also fought a war.
Once these Indian nationals became citizens of these two countries, they
were treated as "enemies" and their assets in India including land and
houses as well as shares were seized and held by the Custodian of Enemy
Property of India.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government has been tightening the
provisions of the Enemy Property Act 1968 to include even lawful heirs
who stayed behind and were Indian citizens.
Modi's cabinet on Thursday approved a plan to sell stocks in 996
companies held by 20,323 shareholders, deemed as "enemy shares" the
government said in a statement. The government said 588 were active
firms including 139 listed on the stock exchange.
"The decision will lead to monetization of enemy shares that had been
lying dormant for decades since coming into force (of) the Enemy
Property Act in 1968," it said.
Those who left India for Pakistan were Muslims, and relations between
the two countries remain fraught after numerous conflicts. Pakistan
enacted a similar law at the time and seized properties of those who
left for India.
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India's Prime Minister
Narendra Modi gestures as he addresses the gathering during the
'Global Mobility Summit' in New Delhi, India, September 7, 2018.
REUTERS/Adnan Abidi/File Photo
The Indian government's move comes as it is casting around for funds to support
welfare programs in the final months before a national election in the summer of
2019.
It is also struggling to meet its target of raising a record 1 trillion rupees
($14.25 billion) from the sale of state assets in the current fiscal year ending
in March 2019.
The government said the proceeds from the sale of stocks held under enemy assets
would be treated as part of the divestment proceeds.
"The government will gain from the sales of enemy shares and the proceeds will
be used for development and social welfare of our people," said federal law
minister Ravi Shankar Prasad.
The number of properties with the Custodian of Enemy Property had risen to about
16,000 by last year from 2,100 a few years ago - nearly all taken from Muslim
families - and are estimated at more than 1 trillion Indian rupees ($13.76
billion), media reported.
($1 = 72.7700 Indian rupees)
(Reporting by Sanjeev Miglani; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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