Congress says something 'fishy' after auditor issues qualified opinion on accounts of Adani Ports & SEZ

While the Adani group has denied all allegations, the Supreme Court constituted an expert committee for the assessment of the extant regulatory framework and asked stock market regulator SEBI to complete its probe into the allegations

May 31, 2023 08:12 pm | Updated 08:12 pm IST - NEW DELHI

Congress Leader Jairam Ramesh. File.

Congress Leader Jairam Ramesh. File. | Photo Credit: R.V. MOORTHY

The Congress on May 31 cited a "qualified opinion" issued by an auditor on the accounts of Adani Ports & Special Economic Zone to ask why the firm did not engage an independent entity to address the auditor's concerns, if everything was above board.

Congress general secretary Jairam Ramesh said the auditor Deloitte Haskins and Sells certainly was not buying Adani's hollow "clean chit" claims, even as the Securities and Exchange Board of India investigations continued.

"It has stated that Adani Ports' transactions with three entities cannot be shown to be with unrelated parties, and has therefore issued a 'qualified opinion' on the company's accounts. It further says that Adani 'has refused to get an independent external examination that would help prove so'," Ramesh said in a tweet.

He asked as to what the Adani Ports was hiding.

"Why not engage an independent firm to address your auditor's concerns if everything is above board as claimed?" the Congress leader said and added 'Dal mein kuchh kala toh hoga (there would be something fishy)', using the Hindi proverb.

Mr. Ramesh's remarks came after auditor Deloitte flagged three transactions, including recoveries from a contractor identified in the Hindenburg Research report, as it issued a qualified opinion on the accounts of Adani Ports & Special Economic Zone.

In the auditors' report on the audit of the fourth quarter and 2022-2023 financials, Deloitte Haskins & Sells LLP highlighted transactions with three entities, which the company said were unrelated parties.

Deloitte, however, said it could not attest to the company's statement as no independent external examination had been done to prove the claims.

Hindenburg Research in its January 24 report that levelled allegations of fraud, stock manipulation, and money laundering against the Adani group, had also flagged inadequate disclosures of related party transactions.

While the group has denied all allegations, the Supreme Court constituted an expert committee for the assessment of the extant regulatory framework and asked stock market regulator SEBI to complete its probe into the allegations.

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