Millennium Post

Benami Property Act effective from Nov 11

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NEW DELHI: The new law to prohibit benami transactio­ns, which also provides for up to 7 years imprisonme­nt and fine for those indulging in such activities, will come into effect from November 1.

With a view to curb the menace of black money, Parliament in August had passed the Benami Transactio­ns (Prohibitio­n) Act, after assurance from Finance Minister Arun Jaitley that genuine religious trusts will be kept out of the purview of the legislatio­n.

"The rules and all the provisions of the Benami Transactio­ns (Prohibitio­n) Act shall come into force on November 1, 2016. After coming into effect, the existing Benami Transactio­ns (Prohibitio­n) Act, 1988, shall be renamed as the Prohibitio­n of Benami Property Transactio­ns Act, 1988," a CBDT statement said.

While the existing law provides for up to three years of imprisonme­nt or fine or both for carrying out benami transactio­ns, the amended legislatio­n would provide for seven years imprisonme­nt and fine.

The Act defines benami transactio­ns, prohibits them and further provides that any violation is punishable with imprisonme­nt and fine. The PBPT Act prohibits recovery of the property held benami from benamidar by the real owner.

"Properties held benami are liable for confiscati­on by the government without payment of compensati­on," it said.

An appellate mechanism has been provided under the Act in the form of Adjudicati­ng Authority and Appellate Tribunal.

A Joint or Additional Commission­er of I-T, an Assistant or Deputy Commission­er and a Tax Recovery Officer in each Principal CCIT Region have been notified to perform the functions and exercise the powers of the Approving Authority, Initiating Officer and Administra­tor, respective­ly under the Act, the statement said.

While the 1988 Act has nine sections, the amended law would have 71 sections.

"There is Section 58 under the law which clearly states that in case of charitable or religious organisati­on properties, the government has power to exempt those," Jaitley had said responding to concerns of some Parliament members about the applicabil­ity of the amended law on properties in the name of holy books and deities.

"If there is a genuine property which belongs to a church or a mosque or a gurdwara or a temple, section 58 says that the government has the power to exempt it," he had said.

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