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Embattled business tycoon Vijay Mallya, who is wanted in India for loan default, claimed on Tuesday that he has "enough evidence" to plead his case as he appeared before Westminster Magistrates' Court in London for an extradition case hearing.
The 61-year-old former chief of erstwhile Kingfisher Airlines, who has been out on bail since his arrest in April, arrived for the hearing in Court Room 3 after a number of other extradition cases on schedule for the day.
"I have not eluded any court...I have enough evidence to prove my case," Mallya told reporters outside the court.
Chief magistrate Emma Louise Arbuthnot will preside over what is referred to as a "case management hearing", when a final hearing date is expected to be set.
Britain's Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) will present the case in court on behalf of the Indian authorities.
Mallya's defence team is being led by the firm



Joseph Hague Aaronson LLP. They have instructed barrister Clare Montgomery, a specialist in criminal, regulatory and fraud law, to argue in court on their behalf.
The CPS have instructed Mark Summers to act as barrister for the CPS Extradition Unit and the Government of India.
Summers is a leading expert in extradition and international law matters.
"There might be a few more hearings in this case in the coming months to deal with case management or any issues that arise, before the final hearing takes place, at which the full arguments from both sides in this case will be heard by the Judge," said Jasvinder Nakhwal, partner at Peters and Peters Solicitors LLP and member of the UK's Extradition Lawyers Association.
The CPS had met a joint team of Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and Enforcement Directorate (ED) officials in London last month to thrash out details of the case.

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