The Phnom Penh Post

Head of major Taiwan bank held over ‘illegal loans’

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THE head of a major Taiwanese bank has been detained on suspicion of granting illegal loans, just months after another banking scandal rocked the island’s financial sector.

SinoPac Holdings Chairman Ho Shou-chuan and two others are being probed over an alleged T$5 billion (US$164.8 million) of loans made to an “offshore company with no real operations”.

It is not yet clear what relationsh­ip they have with the firm that received the money. The case comes after the ex-chairman of Mega Internatio­nal Commercial Bank was indicted in December on charges including insider trading.

That followed a massive $180 million fine slapped on Mega by American authoritie­s after they said they found “suspicious transactio­ns” between its New York and Panama branches.

The Taipei District Court approved on Sunday a request by prosecutor­s to take Sinopac’s Ho and the other two suspects into custody, saying there was a risk of evidence tampering or collusion.

Local prosecutor­s investigat­ing the case searched Ho’s residence and office last week.

“[Ho] and the others are suspected of jointly violating laws including the Securities and Exchange Act and breach of trust,” prosecutor­s said.

No charges have been made yet.

The case revolves around alleged illegal lending to a company called J&R Trading Co by a SinoPac subsidiary since 2009.

Local media said the funds were routed to finance an investment into a commercial building in Shanghai.

According to the court statement, Ho insisted at most he is accountabl­e for “administra­tive negligence” and did not cause the company any damage.

SinoPac held an emergency board meeting on Saturday and appointed an acting chairman following Ho’s arrest.

The bank said it will cooperate with the investigat­ion and that its operations are continuing as normal.

Two other people critical in the probe have not been questioned yet as they are out of the country, the court said on Sunday.

Taiwan last year toughened its antimoney laundering laws following the Mega bank scandal.

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