Business Standard

CRYPTO CRAZE INVITES CALLS FOR REGULATION

- GEETIKA SRIVASTAVA New Delhi, 10 January

Demands for a judicious system to regulate the cryptocurr­ency ecosystem have been here for a while. But they have gained momentum since last year, after the Supreme Court of India struck down the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’S) circular that had prohibited banks and financial institutio­ns from providing such services.

The apex court had struck down the circular on grounds of proportion­ality (that the action was more drastic than needed for obtaining the desired result; in this case regulation). With mounting allegation­s of cryptocurr­ency fraud and many aggrieved citizens approachin­g courts, experts say the need for a regulatory mechanism is urgent.

The Saket District Court in New Delhi had, last week, ordered for the publicatio­n of a notice in newspapers across the country, inviting those who alleged fraud against IQ Option — an online cryptocurr­ency trading platform — to join a class action lawsuit.

The case, Achin Sharma vs IQ Option

Europe, serves as a precedent, given that it is among the first cases against an online cryptocurr­ency trading platform.

Sharma, a Delhibased businessma­n, claims he was charged an exorbitant amount of hidden facilitati­on fees at the time of making a $320 deposit in his crypto wallet on the platform. “After the deposit, when I tried to withdraw my money, I was told that my account needed to be ‘verified’,” he claims.

Sharma says every time he tried to verify his account, the website showed an error. Finally, when the website approved his account, his withdrawal request was rejected. He claims that repeated attempts by him and his counsel, Nipun Saxena, to contact the Cyprus-based entity resulted in a single response, saying Sharma was not a client of the website.

IQ Option claims to have over 40 million registered accounts in several countries. When contacted by Business Standard, the firm refused to comment.

Over the past two years, several Ponzi schemes pertaining to cryptocurr­encies have emerged. Another such alleged case is that of one Amit Bhardwaj, who has been accused of a scam of $300 million, promising a whopping 10 per cent monthly return on Bitcoin investment­s under multi-level marketing schemes. After absconding and then being apprehende­d by the police in Bangkok in 2018, he had chargeshee­ts filed against him in Chandigarh, Mumbai, Pune and Delhi.

With Bitcoin rallying to unpreceden­ted highs, surpassing $37,000, concerns of fraudsters feeding off this fervour have risen. “A vacuum has been created, given that there is no specific law regulating cryptocurr­encies in India,” says Rishi Anand, partner, DSK Legal.

Dinkar Kalra, advocate-on-record in the Supreme Court and author of Cryptocurr­encies in India: Not Illegal, But Not Quite Legal, says cryptocurr­ency regulation has always been a grey area. “Multiple Bills have been introduced, but nothing has materialis­ed.”

The draft Banning of Cryptocurr­ency & Regulation of Official Digital Currency Bill, 2019, is yet to be taken up. The Bill stipulates that the use of cryptocurr­ency is punishable with a fine or imprisonme­nt of up to 10 years. However, keeping in mind the apex court’s judgment on the RBI circular, the Bill may fail the test of proportion­ality too, say lawyers.

The Inter-ministeria­l Committee’s initial report in 2018, along with a draft Bill — Crypto Token and Crypto Asset (Banning, Control and Regulation) Bill, 2018 — may also warrant reconsider­ation. This Bill allows the sale and purchase of cryptocurr­encies at recognised and regulated exchanges.

Some laws do provide some protection: Consumer Protection Act, criminal laws, and the Foreign Exchange Management Act. But experts say a specific law is needed for better protection.

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With Bitcoin rallying to unpreceden­ted highs, surpassing $37,000, concerns of fraudsters feeding off this fervour have risen

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