Amitabh Bachchan’s saved from the Bofors case, law organization has completed its 40th anniversary.

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Zaiwalla & co, which was the first Indian-owned city of London legal practitioner,  completed the 40th anniversary of its formation at a reception at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum on Wednesday evening.

Film star Amitabh Bachchan and his brother Ajitabh were in Bofor’s case, The firm, which is established by Mumbai-born Sarosh Zaiwalla in 1990, dealt with that case, then it came to fame in India.

The Bachchans received illegal money to buy field guns for the Indian Army from AB Bofors, a Swedish manufacturer, in the deal, Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter reported. So The Bachchans had slandered the reports for defamation.

After a dramatic hearing, the Bachchans won, thereby not just exonerating themselves, but Gandhi, who on news media had been virtually accused of corruption or at least being aware of wrongdoing. He denied the charge and the matter never came to court, before being abandoned by the BJP-led government of Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee. Gandhi was killed by a Sri Lankan Tamil suicide bomber in 1991.

More recently, Zaiwalla & Co has been in the news taking up cudgels for the Venezuelan central bank against its British counterpart the Bank of England (BoE) to reclaim $1.95 billion worth of gold deposited with the latter. The dispute will be heard on appeal by Zaiwalla in the United Kingdom’s Supreme Court. India, too, has gold in safekeeping with the BoE.

Gopi Hinduja, co-chairman of the London-based Hinduja Group, who 32 years ago asked Zaiwalla to represent the Bachchans, was the chief guest at the reception. Speaking at the function, he said: “The FTA (free trade agreement being negotiated between Britain and India) will make it very easy for Indian law firms to work here as well as British law firms to work in India.”

Among the many prominent figures who attended the celebration the one who caused the most flutter was Indian businessman Vijay Mallya, who is fighting against extradition sought by the Narendra Modi government to India. He claimed his now-defunct Kingfisher Airline – whose failure got him into difficulty – has repaid more than it owed Indian banks as a result of Indian law enforcement agencies auctioning his assets in India.

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