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          New Delhi, April 21 (IANS) The government Thursday told the   Supreme Court that under the Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA) with   other countries, it could not disclose the names of the people under   investigation for alleged money laundering and parking funds in foreign banks   based in tax havens.
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	  The apex court bench of Justice B. Sudershan Reddy and Justice S.S. Nijjar was   told by Solicitor General Gopal Subramanium that under the provisions of the   Income Tax Act, the DTAA agreement had the force of domestic law and thus any   information coming via that route from other countries can't be made   public.
 In a related matter, the court asked Delhi Police commissioner to   file a status report on its investigation on a complaint that Enforcement   Directorate (ED) officer Prabha Kant had threatened Indian Institute of   Technology-Kharagpur Director S.K.Dubey for writing to Prime Minister Manmohan   Singh against ED officials investigating the money laundering scam.
 
 "It   is a very, very serious matter concering the nation. Don't try to trivialise it   by engaging in settling individual grudges," the court said.
 
 The court   was earleir told by Subramanium that the government could make the information   regarding alleged money launderers public only after prosecution was launched   against the accused. In that situation, legally they (names) come in the public   domain and could be made public.
 
 The solicitor general said this to the   court in response to its earlier direction as to why the central government   could not make public the names of people which were given to it by German   authorities and who were holding money in banks in Liechtenstein, a central   European country.
 
 As the solicitor general sought to explain the legal   compulsion of international treaties in withholding the names, the court wanted   to know why the entire investigation into money laundering was centred around   alleged tax evader Hasan Ali Khan and other group of individuals.
 
 The   court wanted to know why the investigation by the ED was becoming individual   centric. "(Mr.) solicitor general why it is becoming one individual centric   investigation. Is it that all money laundered abroad was individual centric,"   the court asked.
 
 Have you found anything about the people, other than the   one individual (Hasan Ali) or group of individual. "Is it only one person who is   holding account in Swiss banks and none other," the court asked.
 
 "Are you   saying that no other Indian has an account (abroad) which is suspect. There is   nothing wrong in having accounts in foreign banks so long they are not suspect.   But are you saying that no Indian has parked his money abroad that is not   suspect," the court queried.
 
 Asking the solicitor general not to limit   the scope of the petition by limiting it to individuals whose names have   surfaced in context of banks in Liechtenstein, court wanted to know what other   information was available with the government.
 
 The court's queries came   in the course of the hearing of a petition by jurist Ram Jethmalani seeking   direction to the central government to take steps to recover black money stashed   away in foreign banks by Indian citizens.
 
 The case would be heard next   Monday.
 
 
      
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