The Asian Age

SAT comes down hard on Irdai member’s order

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New Delhi, March 19: The Securities Appellate Tribunal has come down heavily on a member of regulator IRDAI for making a “false statement” in an order, saying it “virtually amounts to aiding and abetting corruption in the insurance business”.

Setting aside an order passed by IRDAI member ( non- life) P. J. Joseph, the tribunal also directed the regulator to entrust the matter to a “competent officer” other than him and pass a fresh order.

The latest ruling has come on a plea filed by UK- based Atkins Special Risks Ltd against an order passed in the case of Jagson Internatio­nal Ltd.

Atkins is into broking special risk insurance and re- insurance with core competence in marine and energy insurance. It provided internatio­nal reinsuranc­e cover to Jagson during the period 20022012 for an yearly commission.

From 2010 onwards, Jagson chairman Jagdish Gupta’s demand for a cut from the commission was rejected by Atkins, according to details mentioned in the SAT order.

Later in 2012, the company's re- insurance business was transferre­d to Marsh India Insurance Brokers Pvt Ltd.

Suspecting that illegal means were adopted by Gupta in transferri­ng the business, Atkins moved the IRDAI in August 2015. As no action was taken, a writ petition was filed in September 2017 before the Telangana and Andhra Pradesh High Court -which directed the insurance regulator to consider the complaint.

However, Joseph passed an impugned order in January this year wherein the complaint was dismissed, saying that no documentar­y proof or material informatio­n was submitted.

In its order passed on March 16, the tribunal said perusal of the complaint clearly shows that Atkins had relied on documentar­y evidence.

THE TRIBUNAL directed the regulator to entrust the matter to a “competent officer” other than Irdai member P. J. Joseph and pass a fresh order.

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