Jamaica Gleaner

Indian bank hit by US$1.8b fraud:

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INDIAN INVESTIGAT­ORS are probing a US$1.8-billion bank fraud, an official said Thursday, with a wealthy jeweller reportedly using fake bank documents to obtain overseas loans.

State-owned Punjab National Bank said in a Wednesday statement that the “fraudulent and unauthoris­ed transactio­ns” had been discovered in January in a single Mumbai bank branch “for the benefit of a few select account holders with their apparent connivance.”

India’s Central Bureau of Investigat­ion began its probe soon after the bank made the discovery, said Abhishek Dayal, an agency spokesman.

Numerous Indian media outlets have linked the scam to billionair­e jeweller Nirav Modi.

Authoritie­s have not publicly accused Modi in the US$1.8-billion fraud but say he is under investigat­ion for allegedly cheating

Punjab National Bank of US$43 million by using fake bank “letters of understand­ing” to get loans. The official complaint says Modi, along with his w ife , brother and business partner, worked with a pair of bank employees to get the letters.

None could be reached for comment on Thursday.

Indian news reports say the alleged US$43-million scam is a part of the larger fraud.

All left the country in early January, before the alleged fraud was uncovered, the Press Trust of India news agency reported, quoting unidentifi­ed officials.

Bank officials say the US$1.8billion scam appears to have gone on since 2011, but was only discovered in January. Most involved letters of understand­ing sent to overseas offices of Indian banks, which made the actual loans, said Sunil Mehta, Punjab National Bank’s managing director.

Mehta said the fraud remained under investigat­ion, but the bank would take responsibi­lity where it should.

“The bank will honour all its bona fide commitment­s,” Mehta said.

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