Deccan Chronicle

AP Covid-orphans run into bankers’ red tape

- VADREVU SRINIVAS I DC

Children who have lost both parents in the

Covid-19 pandemic are facing serious taxation travails. Banks are insisting on production of PAN Card for tax exemption vis-à-vis the government compensati­on the beneficiar­ies get. Else, banks are telling the guardians they would cut nearly

`5,000 as income tax from the accounts of orphans.

This is posing a hurdle for the children and their guardians when they go to withdraw money.

The state government is giving `10 lakh as compensati­on for each children or teenager below age 18 who have lost their mother and father.

The government is directly putting the money as Fixed Deposit in these beneficiar­y accounts and the guardian can draw the interest amount to take care of the children by way of providing them nutritiona­l food, education and medical care.

In East Godavari, 16 such children out of a list of 30 already got the amounts in their bank accounts. Banks will credit the interest amount once every three months. The time to draw the interest amount has come as the money remained in these accounts for the past three months.

“Now the bankers are insisting on PAN Cards’’ for scrutiny and income tax deduction. Otherwise, `5,000 would be deducted from the account as income tax. Today we submitted a PAN Card to the banker,’’ said Pushpalath­a, paternal aunt of Vaddi Saranya who lost both father Babji and mother Achutha Kumari. Babji’s father Subba Rao, a security guard, is looking after Saranya.

The government made a fixed deposit of `10 lakh into the account of Saranya in May last.

Many of the guardians of the orphaned children are worried that if they submit the PAN Card or if an amount is deducted by way of income tax from the account,’ they might in future lose their white ration card and its benefits given to the BPL families.

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