Himachal Director General of Police (DGP) Sanjay Kundu on Sunday said that the process to ensure the extradition of three accused from Australia in a fake degrees scam at a Solan-based private university has been initiated.
He said that Karnal-based Raj Kumar Rana, the chairman of the Manav Bharti Charitable Trust that runs the Manav Bharti University (MBU), is the prime accused in the fake degrees scam.
Rana’s wife, daughter and son have also been named as accused in the case, he said, adding that since they are in Australia, the process to get them extradited to India has been initiated.
A total of 275 people have so far been questioned in detail in connection with the fake degrees scam.
The DGP said that Rana’s passport was revoked on the recommendation of the state police after his arrest in the case. Eight accused were arrested in the case after the registration of three FIRs in November 2019, the officer said, adding that two of them are still in judicial custody.
During the examination of 14 of the 55 hard disks seized in the case so far, the police found the records of 41,000 degrees issued by the university, of which 36,000 turned out to be fake and were issued to people in 17 states across the country. “This is only the tip of the iceberg as the investigation is still on and more startling revelations are expected,” he added. The Himachal Pradesh Government had given permission to the Manav Bharti Charitable Trust to run the university in 2009 after initially rejecting a proposal in this regard in 2008.
The Enforcement Directorate (ED) had on Friday attached assets worth Rs 194.16 crore belonging to the Manav Bharti University, its associated concerns and promoters in connection with a money-laundering probe against them linked to the alleged fake degrees scam.