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FIR against Jammu and Kashmir bank for Rs 1100 crore fraud

Anti Corruption Bureau registered a Preliminary Enquiry on allegations that the officials of the bank’s branches at Mumbai’s Mahim and Delhi’s Ansal Plaza had sanctioned loans to the tune of Rs 800 crore in favour of REI Agro on the basis of fake documents and in violation of the laid-down banking procedure.

FIR against Jammu and Kashmir bank for Rs 1100 crore fraud

Representational image. (Photo : iStock)

Another bank in the country has been reported to be involved in a fraud case after the Anti-Corruption Bureau on Saturday filed a First Information Report (FIR) in the Jammu and Kashmir Bank loan case involving over Rs 1,100 crore, officials said.

The said amount was advanced by the bank to Rice Exports India (REI) Agro Ltd soon after the FIR, different teams carried out extensive searches at the houses of over a dozen accused bank officials, including its former chairman Mushtaq Ahmad Sheikh, at nine locations in Kashmir, four in Jammu and three in Delhi, an ACB spokesperson said in a statement here.

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He said the houses of REI Agro’s chairman Sanjay Jhunjhunwala and vice president and managing director Sandeep Jhunjhunwala were also searched in Delhi.

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Further investigation into the matter was underway and three teams were continuing with the searches in Delhi, the spokesperson added.

The ACB registered a Preliminary Enquiry (PE) on allegations that the officials of the bank’s branches at Mumbai’s Mahim and Delhi’s Ansal Plaza had sanctioned loans to the tune of Rs 800 crore in favour of REI Agro on the basis of fake documents and in violation of the laid-down banking procedure between 2011 and 2013, which resulted in the accounts becoming non-performing assets (NPAs) in 2014, thereby causing a huge financial loss to the bank.

It emerged during the PE that REI Agro, which had shown its head office in Kolkata and corporate office in New Delhi, approached the Mahim branch of the bank, even though it did not have an office in Mumbai, and got loans or advances worth Rs 550 crore sanctioned in its favour, the spokesperson said, adding that the Vasant Vihar branch of the bank in New Delhi also sanctioned Rs 139 crore in the firm’s favour against the supplier bill discounting facility and takeovers.

He said the company approached the Mahim and Vasant Vihar branches of the bank for sanctioning of the advances to make payments to farmers, in accordance with the terms and conditions laid down in the loan sanction order of the bank.

“The farmers were supposed to provide paddy to the company and in turn, the company had to sell the produce and the remittance thereof had to be deposited in the bank as installments against the advances received by the company.”

“Despite the fact that it was known to the bank authorities and the company that the loan amount had to be disbursed among farmers for production of paddy, the company brazenly violated the rules in connivance with bank officials, who allowed disbursement of the loan through joint liability groups (JLGs), though the company had already received the paddy and was not entitled to disburse the loan under such circumstances,” the spokesperson said.

According to the probe conducted during the PE, the JLGs were found to be non-existing entities, the credentials and antecedents of which were never verified by the bank, he added.

“The objective was to facilitate the company to divert the loan amount for its own benefits. The bank also violated NABARD guidelines, according to which members of JLGs (groups of farmers) should be from the same area or village, but this aspect was deliberately and with mala fide intentions ignored by the bank officers,” the spokesperson said.

Further, the bank officers had also failed to take cognisance of the disbursement requests by the company, where it was mentioned that it had already received the produce from the farmers or JLGs, thus making the loan unwarranted, he said.

On a scrutiny of the bank’s records, nothing was found as to who had drafted the loan documents and there was not even any vetting certificate of its law department, the spokesperson added.

These loans or advances were sanctioned and disbursed by the officers and officials of the bank’s Mahim, Mumbai and Vasant Vihar, New Delhi branches, in connivance with and under the patronage of the then chairman of the bank, Mushtaq Ahmad Sheikh, as part of a single conspiracy spread over several years, he said. The ACB spokesperson added that huge monetary benefits were conferred upon the company dishonestly and fraudulently, which resulted in inflicting a huge loss of Rs 1124.45 crore to the bank.

The case comes after multiple bank frauds like the PMC and the PNB scam have already been making headlines in the financial sector.

(With inputs from PTI)

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