Mehajer AVO amended: Salim can now contact Aysha

Banned property developer Salim Mehajer has had his apprehended violence order amended, allowing him to now approach and speak to his estranged wife Aysha.

The court ruling follows the public airing of his violent phone rant where he threatened her.

The AVO warns Mr Mehajer against threatening anyone Aysha is now in a relationship with.

He is also banned from homes in Sydney and Wollongong where she stays.

The court's decision came a day after Mr Mehajer was banned from managing corporations for three years, with the Administrative Appeals Tribunal upholding an ASIC ban for his "cavalier approach".

The AAT upheld in August the Australian Securities and Investments Commission's decision last November to disqualify Mr Mehajer from managing corporations for three years, as there was a "need for such a disqualification in the public interest as a means of protecting others from his incompetence".


Mr Mehajer had appealed the ASIC ban to the AAT and obtained a suppression order on the proceedings. The suppression order expired last Friday.

Mr Mehajer has been banned until November 5, 2018 after ASIC found his "inability to manage corporations to the standard expected of him" led to SM Property Development and SM Engineering and Constructions failing, owing $886,701 and $159,9026 respectively to the Australian Taxation Office.

Salim Mehajer and Aysha Mehajer arrive at Bankstown Court House in Sydney on Wednesday, November 18, 2015. Photo: AAP
Salim Mehajer and Aysha Mehajer arrive at Bankstown Court House in Sydney on Wednesday, November 18, 2015. Photo: AAP

ASIC also found Mr Mehajer's conduct lacked "commercial morality" in that he allowed SM Property Development to collect $315,192 in GST from the sale of townhouses that was then not paid the tax office.

The AAT also found that Mr Mehajer "adopted a cavalier approach to his management of the companies, which included their responsibility to creditors, and his duties to ensure that the companies met their legal obligations," ASIC said in a statement on Monday.

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