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BR Shetty breaks his silence: I intend to return to the UAE

BR Shetty breaks his silence: I intend to return to the UAE


Mangalore Today News Network

Bengaluru, April 19, 2020: BR Shetty, the founder of NMC Health, which was placed into administration by a UK court last week and faces criminal charges, said he flew to India in early February for personal reasons.

Mr Shetty told The National when reached by phone on Friday that he left the UAE to Mangalore on February 7 to be with his brother, who had cancer and died earlier this month aged 82. “He was sick. That’s why I came in February and he was sick for two months and he died maybe a fortnight back,” Mr Shetty said.

“Once the coronavirus restrictions are over and flights are open, I’ll come” back to the UAE, he said. He is with his wife, while the rest of his family remains in Abu Dhabi, he added.


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Reports had suggested Mr Shetty fled to India as legal and operational challenges mounted in relation to his companies NMC Health and Finablr, both listed on the London Stock Exchange.

Mr Shetty said he has “kept quiet” about the allegations he and his companies are facing, and “didn’t want to react, because I don’t know the facts, I don’t know what happened”.

In a statement to The National, Mr Shetty said: “Given my own legal and forensic investigations are now starting to produce some initial findings, and in consideration of some of the misleading and false allegations that have made against me, I will be looking to respond in the appropriate manner and with the appropriate authorities both in the UAE and elsewhere … I am absolutely determined to bring to light the full facts, and the whole truth, around what has transpired as soon as possible.”

Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank has initiated criminal legal proceedings with the attorney general in Abu Dhabi against a number of individuals linked to NMC Health.

“This action is consistent with the bank’s objective to protect its interests," the lender said in a statement on Wednesday.

The bank, which is the embattled hospital operator’s biggest sole creditor with an exposure of $981 million, did not specify who it had initiated criminal proceedings against.

A UK court placed NMC Health into administration on the application of ADCB last week.

Overall, UAE banks have a combined exposure of at least Dh8bn to the healthcare firm. Other significant creditors include Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank, Dubai Islamic Bank, Barclays and Standard Chartered. NMC also owes money to Oman-based banks and financial institutions.

The latest development comes as joint administrators Alvarez & Marsal appointed four new non-executive directors "to ensure more robust standards of governance" at the firm.

More than 80 major local, regional and international financial institutions extended credit to NMC, which was founded by Mr Shetty in Abu Dhabi in 1975, and now employs more than 2,000 doctors and about 20,000 other staff in 19 countries.


Inputs from The National


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