AJ and Modi were doing their job as per the Boss' instructions. But Anil is convinced that, without the two, Mukesh may not have been able to wrest control over the family's stake in RIL. Anil's camp has also blamed Jain for diverting thousands of crores of rupees from RIL to Reliance Infocomm, the telecom venture which is Mukesh's brainchild, and other entities, owned and/or controlled by the latter. There are more reasons that may have forced Anil to train his guns on AJ and Modi. The first is the fact that AJ's and Modi's relatives have benefited from Reliance. One of the latter's family members is the group's chief technology officer, and sources all hardware and software requirements; another is the group's liaison officer in Gujarat. What's also been established is that the firms owned by AJ's family are both RIL's suppliers and distributors (The Loser Is You, Outlook, December 27) and the group has purchased several dozen flats in a housing society, of which AJ is the president, in Mumbai's Prabhadevi.
"The business links between RIL and my family's firms are minor compared to the latter's annual revenues. Some of these ties were forged because Dhirubhai wished them. The truth about Prabhadevi's housing society is that Reliance got the best deal. I have never done anything to harm Reliance," says Jain. He then becomes aggressive: "You'll be surprised if I tell you how many people have got jobs in the group because of pressure from Anil and his political friends." He calms down and says, "But we'll not talk about that as we're not in that dirty game."
But Anil is certain that Mukesh's advisors have belittled him in recent times. Several papers have reported how AJ and MM have said they can throw Anil out of RIL's board and "put him on the street". There's a story about AJ's reaction when a journalist asked him about Anil's letter asking for an early RIL board meeting. "Koi bhi chaprasi chitthi likhega toh board meeting kar lenge kya (If any peon writes a letter, will we call a board meeting?)," Jain reportedly said. Although Jain denied the statement, the incident left Anil fuming. Obviously, he decided to get even with these guys.
Similarly, Anil can never miss a chance to get back at another of Mukesh's advisors, Sandeep Tandon, former deputy director, Enforcement Directorate.Tandon was part of the ED's team which, in the 1980s, investigated the links between the Ambanis and dozens of shell firms based in tax havens like the Isle of Man.In 1994, he took premature retirement and joined the Ambanis as group president (taxation), at an annual salary of around Rs 1 crore.Anil's grouse against Tandon is in his belief that he was behind the FERA raids against his then-would-be wife Tina and her parents in 1991.This was after Anil told his family about his intention to marry the former actress, which was opposed by Dhirubhai.
Completing Anil's hate list are the two Meswani brothers, Nikhil and Hital. The sons of Dhirubhai's first cousin, the late Rasikbhai Meswani, they were inducted into RIL's board after their father died in the mid-1980s. Nikhil came aboard in 1986 at the age of 21, and Hital in 1995 when he was 26. The reason: Rasikbhai was Dhirubhai's true partner and looked after RIL's affairs in Delhi since the late 1970s, while Dhirubhai focused on Mumbai and Ahmedabad.Dhirubhai felt he should take care of the two nephews, even though they were quite young.
Yet again, one can't blame the Meswanis for being in Anil's bad books. It's Anil's belief—and there's no proof to back his claims —that the Meswanis' stake in RIL is higher than his. Going by what sources told Outlook, the two Ambani brothers have a personal holding of around 2.5 per cent each in RIL, with their mother Kokilaben owning about 18 lakh shares. Apart from this, the promoters control 7.5 per cent through the Petroleum Trust and 34.04 per cent owned by the investment firms. However, Anil thinks Mukesh has transferred 7 per cent of RIL shares to the Meswanis. When we asked Nikhil, he said, "Why don't you check the public register and see if our names figure there?" Other RIL sources said the Meswanis don't have any shares in their own names, or in their family members' names. Still, Anil has been told that their ownership is indirectly through privately-owned investment firms that form a part of the overall matrix.
Anil Ambani's assaults on his elder brother have shifted gears. From targeting Mukesh directly to going for the men around the Boss...the men the Boss trusts more than his own brother.