In a major development in the ongoing National Herald money laundering case, the Enforcement Directorate (ED) has commenced proceedings to take possession of properties linked to senior Congress leaders Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi. These actions come after the agency’s provisional attachment of assets worth over Rs 750 crore — confirmed recently by the Adjudicating Authority under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) — was deemed valid for confiscation.
On Friday (April 11), ED issued fresh notices to property registrars in Delhi, Mumbai, and Lucknow, instructing them to initiate the process of taking control of key immovable assets owned by Associated Journals Limited (AJL). These properties had earlier been attached in November 2023, including holdings in Herald House (Delhi), Nehru Bhawan (Lucknow), and commercial floors in Mumbai, with a combined estimated value of Rs 661 crore, along with AJL shares worth Rs 90.2 crore.
Background of the Case
The case centres around AJL, the company that historically published the National Herald newspaper, founded by India’s first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru in 1938. After decades of publication, the newspaper ceased operations in 2008 due to financial losses. However, AJL continued to hold valuable real estate assets in multiple cities across India.
In 2010, a private company named Young Indian Pvt Ltd (YIL) in which Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi collectively own 76 per cent stake took over AJL’s debts and, subsequently, its entire shareholding. YIL claimed to have paid a nominal sum of Rs 50 lakh to acquire AJL’s liabilities of Rs 90.25 crore.
According to the ED and the original complainant, BJP leader Dr. Subramanian Swamy, this transaction allowed Young Indian and thus the Gandhi family to indirectly gain control over AJL’s assets worth over Rs 2,000 crore.
Swamy alleged that the transaction was part of a “malicious” strategy to usurp prime public properties under the garb of reviving a defunct newspaper. His 2014 complaint before a Delhi court set off a political and legal firestorm, ultimately leading to an ED investigation formally launched in 2021.
ED’s Findings and Legal Proceedings
The ED claims that the takeover of AJL by Young Indian amounted to a criminal breach of trust, illegal diversion of funds, and laundering of proceeds of crime. According to agency officials, their probe revealed that assets meant for charitable and journalistic purposes were instead repurposed for commercial gain. The ED alleges that no actual effort was made to revive the newspaper after the takeover, and instead, rental income from AJL properties was utilised for unrelated financial gains.
The investigation faced several legal hurdles. However, both the Delhi High Court and the Supreme Court upheld the legality of the probe, allowing the ED to move forward. Multiple raids and seizures have been carried out at properties and offices linked to AJL and Young Indian over the last two years. In April 2023, Rahul Gandhi was questioned by the agency for over 50 hours across five days, while Sonia Gandhi was also summoned and interrogated.
Following the Adjudicating Authority’s confirmation on April 10, the ED is now in the process of securing actual possession of the attached properties. Additionally, a notice has been issued to Jindal South West Projects, the current tenant occupying three commercial floors in the Herald House building in Mumbai. The company has been directed to deposit all future rent payments directly with the ED, bypassing AJL and Young Indian.
ED sources claim the takeover of AJL by YIL was part of a “sophisticated and deliberate financial arrangement” designed to convert public trust property into private assets. “This action aims to stop the ongoing use and monetisation of illegally acquired properties,” an ED official told India Today.
The Congress party has defended the Gandhis and described the ED’s actions as a “political witch-hunt” orchestrated by the ruling BJP. In several public statements, Congress leaders have alleged that the central agencies are being misused to target opposition parties and stifle dissent. Congress had staged nationwide protests in 2022 and 2023 during key moments of ED’s investigation, calling the case “fabricated and vindictive.”
However, legal observers argue that with the Adjudicating Authority now backing the ED’s attachment orders, the investigation has entered a new and serious phase that could lead to prolonged legal consequences for the Congress leadership.
For decades, the Congress party under the leadership of the Nehru-Gandhi family has been accused of systematically looting the nation under the guise of governance. From questionable defence deals to massive banking scams and misuse of public trusts, the Congress regime created a legacy where public resources were allegedly treated as private assets.
The National Herald case is just one glaring example, where properties and funds intended for public interest and journalistic integrity were siphoned off by the Gandhi family through shell companies and backdoor deals.
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