The Enforcement Directorate (ED), for the first time in 14 years, has recently arrested a Surat-based diamond trader for "wilfully" evading forex duty penalties to the tune of Rs 3.99 lakh under section 14 of the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), a civil law where arrest and prison procedures are never heard of.
"This is the first time since 1999 that the agency has arrested and sent to jail someone in a case of foreign exchange violations. More such orders against wilful and chronic defaulters are in the offing across the country," a senior official dealing with FEMA cases said.
The ED action on the trader, in Gujarat's Surat, came in a case where the diamond trader illegally transferred USD 60,000 abroad in alleged violation of FEMA laws.
The competent authority of the FEMA sent the businessman to three months in jail after the ED made a case saying that a number of FEMA penalty notices were not honoured by the trader despite having financial resources to do so.
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The section 14 of FEMA stipulates that "if any person fails to make full payment of the penalty imposed on him under section 13 within a period of 90 days from the date on which the notice for payment of such penalty is served on him, he shall be liable to civil imprisonment."
The top brass of the agency has also directed the agency's offices in the country to select such chronic default cases of forex duty violations and take strict action.