MUMBAI, Jan. 10 (AFP) - The disgraced former chairman of top Indian outsourcing firm Satyam was sent to prison today, days after admitting to a one-billion dollar fraud that has rattled the country's business community.
B. Ramalinga Raju was arrested overnight after he surrendered to the police and was jailed on remand until January 23 by a judge in the southern city of Hyderabad, where Satyam is headquartered, court officials said.
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Indian police escort founder and former Chairman of Satyam Computers B.Ramalinga Raju (Front seat C) after he was sent to prison in Hyderabad |
The fallen chairman's brother, Rama Raju, who is a former Satyam director, was also jailed pending a full trial.
Raju's lawyers said they would seek bail for the disgraced software tycoon, whose admission to wrongdoing prompted a near collapse of Satyam, which boasts high-profile clients in 65 countries.
Raju has been charged with fraud following his admission that his firm's accounts and assets had been falsified over a period of several years, with profits inflated to the tune of more than one billion dollars.
Hyderabad police also arrested Satyam's high-profile financial head, Vadlamani Srinivas, a Hyderabad police spokesman said.
“All the three have been charged with criminal conspiracy, cheating, forgery and a breach of trust,” Hyderabad's chief police detective V. S. K. Kaumudi said.
Indian market regulator the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) is also seeking to question Raju, one of the pioneers of India's outsourcing boom and once the darling of international investment funds.
Satyam shares have gone into freefall this week, closing at 23.85 rupees on Friday compared with a value of around 180 rupees before the scandal erupted.
India's government has also stepped in, and on Friday booted out Satyam's directors' board saying it will name representatives to manage the affairs of the company.
Before being dismissed, the interim Satyam board had pledged to try to keep the company running and rectify the mistakes.
It had also insisted it was unaware of the scam, which has prompted comparisons with the collapse of US energy giant Enron and generated fears over the impact on foreign investment in Indian business and on corporate governance standards.
At least two US shareholder lawsuits were filed against Satyam earlier this week.
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