The Centre is yet to assess the magnitude of the fraud at Satyam Computer Services and find concrete proof of fund diversion by its
founder B Ramalinga Raju, who confessed to cooking the IT firm's books in January this year.
"The Enforcement Directorate and Internal Revenue Service are not looking at criminal culpability, but only probing charges on fund diversion to destinations outside India and among the firms promoted by Raju. I cannot quantify the size of the fraud, but can only say that it is huge," said Salman Khurshid, minister of corporate affairs.
CBI, the apex agency probing the fraud, has completed its investigations and has gathered enough evidence for prosecution. The Andhra Pradesh High Court has also given an in-principle nod for setting up a separate court to expedite trial in the Satyam case.
Even as investigations continue by the ED, the MCA has decided to institute an early-warning system to prevent recurrence of corporate frauds, he said.
Parallely, SEBI has enforced a peer audit review of the accounting statements of all Nifty and Sens*x companies to avoid recurrence of a financial fraud. The Institute of Chartered Accountants (ICAI), which oversees auditors, will take disciplinary action against erring auditors and terminate their licences to audit accounts.