The Sun (Malaysia)

India shuts Punjab National Bank branch

> More employees questioned as probe into biggest financial fraud in country’s banking history continues

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MUMBAI: Indian investigat­ors closed down a branch of a state-run bank that is at the heart of a US$1.77 billion (RM6.9 billion) fraud and questioned more of its employees as they probed the biggest scam in the country’s banking history, police sources said yesterday.

Three people, including two employees of Punjab National Bank (PNB), India’s second largest state-run lender, were arrested and presented before a Mumbai court over the weekend in the case that involves billionair­e jeweller Nirav Modi.

The Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI), which is leading the probe, pasted a notice on the branch premises in south Mumbai barring anyone from entering the office.

The bank has said that the two employees arrested by police colluded with companies belonging to jeweller Modi and another jeweller Mehul Choksi. They issued fraudulent letters of undertakin­g to overseas branches of other Indian banks which lent money to the jewellers based on the guarantee from PNB.

All the letters of undertakin­g were issued by the two employees who were working at the Brady Road branch in south Mumbai.

Police searched the bank premises on Sunday and also questioned five more PNB officials, a source said, taking the total number bank staff who have been questioned so far to 11.

Police also questioned some executives from Nirav Modi’s group, the source said.

PNB shares slid for a fourth straight day on Monday, falling 6.7% by 0614 GMT. The sell off has wiped out about US$1.7 billion, or more than a quarter of the bank’s market value, since it disclosed the fraud last Wednesday. Other bank stocks with exposure to the fraudulent transactio­ns that PNB says began in 2011 also fell.

UCO Bank, another state-run lender, said over the weekend it had nearly US$412 million in exposure to the fraudulent transactio­ns carried out at PNB, sending its shares down more than 12% in Monday trading.

Union Bank of India and State Bank of India are among other lenders which have said they had exposure to the fraudulent transactio­ns.

Jeweller Modi, whose clients include Hollywood stars such as Kate Winslet and Dakota Johnson, has not commented on the allegation­s. Police have said Modi and his family left India before PNB filed a complaint on the alleged fraud.

Including direct loans given to companies of Modi and Choksi, Indian banks are at the risk of taking a hit of more than US$3 billion after the fraud, according to an internal tax department note seen by Reuters.

 ??  ?? A man tries to remove a notice pasted on the wall of a Punjab National Bank branch after it was sealed by India's federal police in Mumbai, India, yesterday.
A man tries to remove a notice pasted on the wall of a Punjab National Bank branch after it was sealed by India's federal police in Mumbai, India, yesterday.

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