The Free Press Journal

SBI declines to share info on money in suspended accounts

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The SBI has declined to share informatio­n about the quantum of money lying in suspended bank accounts where customers do not claim interest on their deposits due to religious reasons. Replying to an RTI query, the State Bank of India (SBI) said it does not maintain such informatio­n in its database "in normal course of business and extraction of the same will be voluminous and time taking activity. "We, therefore, decline your applicatio­n under Section 7 (9) of RTI Act as the informatio­n sought by you is likely to divert disproport­ionately the resources of the bank," it said in reply to the applicatio­n filed by PTI. The section bars disclosure of informatio­n which would disproport­ionately divert the resources of the public authority or would be detrimenta­l to the safety or preservati­on of the record in question. These suspended accounts belong to Muslims who do not want interest on their deposits. The Islamic law or Shariat prohibits paying any fee for renting money (called riba) for specific periods of time. Islamic banks follow the principle of interest-free banking. The bank was asked to provide details of suspended accounts, including their number and money lying in those. It was also asked to share details of guidelines to deal with interest accruing from the deposits. The interest which is not claimed by depositors due to religious reasons is kept in suspended bank accounts. According to an article published in the Reserve Bank of India's journal in 2005, thousands of crores of rupees earned as interest is kept in suspended accounts. "Research reveals that a handsome bulk of money in India owned by believers is lying idle, which if invested in profit sharing basis and utilised properly, can have a major impact on the Indian economy," the article read.

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