A bench headed by Justice T S Thakur, however, raised apprehension on Sahara selling international properties and asked the company to first dispose of its assets which are in the country.
Advocate Rajiv Dhawan, appearing for Roy, however, submitted that Rs 5,000 crore might not be raised by selling assets situated in the country and pleaded the court to allow him to sell off hotels Dream Downtown and The Plaza in New York and Grosvenor House in London for which negotiations are going on.
The bench asked SEBI to come out with suggestions on how to monitor selling of overseas property and posted the case for hearing tomorrow.
"We are naive in these matters. We do not know how the international market work. You(SEBI) must ensure that there is no mischief in sale and there is no underhand payment in the deal," it said, adding, "Why don't you look into these issues to ensure that all possibility of leakages are plugged."
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In the meantime, IT department also filed an application saying that Sahara also owes Rs 7,000 crore as tax and wanted to be heard in the ongoing proceedings.
The company also told the apex court that it has so far raised Rs 3,117 crore which has been deposited with the market regulator.
Dhawan, however, rejected the claim made by the department saying that the company would challenge the issue in the appellate tribunal.
The Sahara group, however, had been claiming that it has already repaid money to 93 per cent investors.