Vijay Mallya's Kingfisher Airlines stopped functioning in 2012
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Vijay Mallya offers to pay back 4,000 crores by September
Offer made via video-conference to banks
Mallya's airline owes a billion dollars, he left India on March 2
Mr Mallya's uncomplicated exit from the country earlier this month incited political recriminations, with the opposition asking why the liquor baron who dubbed himself "The King of Good Times" was able to travel abroad at a time when banks are desperate for his airline, which stopped functioning in 2012, to repay its loans.
On Twitter, which he uses regularly, Mr Mallya, who is in the UK, has stressed that he is a parliamentarian who will obey laws and is not escaping his debts; however, the 60-year-old has refused to comply with two orders to make himself available for interrogation in Mumbai.
The judges asked his lawyers today when he plans to return to India; they responded that since he is available via video conference, there's no urgent need for him to head home, and he should not be considered an absconder.
For years, banks - many of them state-run - continued to loan Kingfisher Airlines vast amounts though its financial fractures were no secret. The CBI is investigating whether bank officials colluded with Mr Mallya to keep the money coming. Another aspect of the inquiry is whether Vijay Mallya siphoned large parts of the loan abroad, falsely claiming that he was settling bills for services like parking his planes at international airports.
The entrepreneur has denied all charges.
Mr Mallya inherited a fortune and then went on to multiply it largely on the strength of his best-selling Kingfisher Beer.
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