Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Cabinet approves overhaul of CB’S Non-bank Financial Institutio­ns Supervisio­n Dept.

- By Nishel Fernando

The Non-bank Financial Institutio­ns Supervisio­n Department of the Central Bank is to go through a complete overhaul with a new i nstitution­al structure t o regulate finance companies as the Cabinet of Ministers this week approved a proposal to i mplement t he recommenda­tion of the Presidenti­al Commission appointed to investigat­e, inspect and report on the alleged wrongdoing­s, irregulari­ties and malpractic­es of the failed finance company, Edirisingh­e Trust Investment­s Ltd (ETI).

President Gotabaya Rajapaksa this week sought t he approval of t he Cabinet of Ministers to implement the recommenda­tion of the Commission chaired by retired Supreme Court

Judge K.T. Chitrasiri while sharing the key findings of the Commission along with the report.

The Cabinet Co-spokespers­on Minister Keheliya Rambukwell­a yesterday told reporters that the Commission pointed at a range of alleged wrongdoing­s, irregulari­ties and malpractic­es including irregulari­ties within the Non-bank Financial Institutio­ns Supervisio­n Department.

Therefore, the Commission has recommende­d the Ministry of Finance to completely reform the Non-bank Financial Institutio­ns Supervisio­n Department of the Central Bank and to formulate a new institutio­nal structure to regulate finance companies.

“The aforesaid Commission has pointed out that there have been several offences under the Company Law, Financial Cooperatio­n Act, Money Laundering Act, Financial Informatio­n Reporting Act, legal framework for the transfer of lands to foreigners as well as the Penal Code,” Rambukwell­a said.

Hence, he said that the report would be forwarded to the Attorney General to pursue immediate legal action to execute the recommenda­tions of the Commission report on alleged finance and property irregulari­ties of ETI.

As Edirisingh­e family-owned ETI ran into serious liquidity issues with a nearly US$ 200 million hole in its balance sheet,

it was forced to dispose the shares of its subsidiary and sub-subsidiary companies as well as investment properties for US$ 75 million to a joint venture company between Singapore-based Blue Summit Group and its local partner Ben Holdings linked to investment banker Alex Lovell. The CB claimed that it only played the facilitati­on role in the transactio­n in acting on behalf of the interest of the depositors, which enabled to settle down 35 percent of the deposit liabilitie­s (including interest payments) to ETI’S existing deposit holders.

The Commission, which was appointed in January this year, submitted the report containing its observatio­ns and recommenda­tions on October 6 to President Rajapaksa.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka