SynopsisSingapore's High Court has stayed the jail sentence and committal provisions against Byju's founder Byju Raveendran. This means he is not required to surrender, and no jail term will take effect while the civil contempt case, linked to loan guarantees and asset obligations, remains sub judice.ETtechByju's said that the Singapore High Court has stayed the committal and surrender provisions of its earlier contempt order against Byju Raveendran, meaning the company's founder is no longer required to surrender and no jail term will take effect while the matter is sub judice.The stay, granted on June 10 as per the company's lawyers, comes after Raveendran moved court against the May 25 order that sentenced him to six months in jail in a matter linked to document disclosure and asset-related obligations. This marked another escalation in the legal disputes surrounding Raveendran and the collapsed edtech firm.Raveendran’s senior litigation advisor J. Michael McNutt of Lazareff Le Bars said the matter was a civil contempt case arising from a dispute over a loan guaranteed by Raveendran for the benefit of Think & Learn, the parent of Byju’s.“There is no criminal charge against Mr Raveendran in that respect. It is not a finding on the merits of the underlying dispute, and it is certainly not a finding of fraud, dishonesty, diversion of funds, or personal wrongdoing,” McNutt said in a statement.Raveendran said he welcomed the stay and reiterated that the case was being wrongly portrayed at a time when parties were engaged in settlement discussions. “Neither I nor any of the founders received any portion of the disputed funds,” he said, adding that his family had put more than Rs 5,000 crore of personal wealth back into the company.The development comes after the Singapore court’s earlier order had brought renewed focus on Aakash Educational Services, one of the few remaining assets of meaningful value in the Byju’s ecosystem. The proceedings are linked to disputes involving Qatar Investment Authority and Raveendran-linked entities, including around asset disclosures.Separately, Byju’s parent Think & Learn remains under insolvency proceedings in India, while GLAS Trust, which represents the lenders of Byju’s $1.2-billion term loan, has been pursuing recovery claims. The ownership and value of Aakash continue to sit at the centre of several overlapping claims involving QIA, GLAS, Manipal Group, and Raveendran-linked entities.Also Read: From $22 billion to zero: Success, not failure, brought Byju down ...moreElevate your knowledge and leadership skills at a cost cheaper than your daily tea.Subscribe Now
Singapore High Court has stayed jail sentence against founder: Byju's - The Economic Times
Singapore's High Court has stayed the jail sentence and committal provisions against Byju's founder Byju Raveendran. This means he is not required to surrender, and no jail term will take effect while the civil contempt case, linked to loan guarantees and asset obligations, remains sub judice.
Singapore High Court stayed Raveendran's sentence (June 10); civil contempt stems from Byju's $1.2B debt and Aakash ownership dispute with QIA. Tech leaders: founder-creditor disputes in M&A signal governance collapse and insolvency risk in high-growth models.







