Indian shipbuilder accused of record PKR528 bn bank fraud
MUMBAI: A shipbuilding company has been accused of defrauding India’s largest state-run bank and 27 other financial institutions of over $3 billion, the country’s top investigative agency said, in what would be its biggest-ever bank fraud.
The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) -- India’s federal investigative agency -- said in a statement that ABG Shipyard had duped 28 banks out of 228.42 billion rupees (PKR528 billion).
The alleged theft by the Gujarat-based shipbuilder surpasses the $2 billion jeweller Nirav Modi was accused of cheating Indian banks out of in 2018, so far the country’s largest known bank fraud.
Private lender ICICI Bank was ABG’s biggest victim, losing more than $900 million, according to a forensic audit by Ernst & Young released at the weekend by the State Bank of India, another of its lenders.
State-run IDBI Bank -- owned by IPO-bound insurer LIC -- was next with nearly $500 million, the document said, followed by the State Bank of India (SBI) itself -- the country’s biggest state-owned lender -- on almost $400 million.
In all, the Indian taxpayer lost $2 billion to the scheme, according to the audit report figures.
The CBI said the company diverted and misappropriated funds between 2012 and 2017 -- even as its lenders worked to resuscitate the ailing firm and save it from liquidation.
The SBI filed a police complaint against ABG Shipyard, its overseas subsidiary, five company directors and "unknown public servant(s) & private person(s)".
The CBI raided 13 locations including company offices and the directors’ homes on Saturday, it said, "which led to recovery of incriminating documents", and further investigation is ongong.
ABG Shipyard first defaulted on loan payments in 2013 and was named as one of India’s 12 biggest defaulters when the country introduced its first bankruptcy law in 2016.
The firm was finally ordered liquidated three years later, but four separate auctions failed to find buyers for its assets and it has been trying to sell them privately for the last two years.
-
Britney Spears’ Eldest Son Pays Quiet Tribute To Popstar After Latest Reunion -
China Tightens Rules On Digital Humans And Addictive Kids’ Content: Here’s Why -
Prince Harry, Meghan Get Sweet Chance To Reunite With Royal Family In Britain -
US Disrupts Global Malaria And HIV Supply Chains, Sparking Health Crisis Fears -
King Charles Holds Key To Meeting Prince Archie, Princess Lilibet -
Meryl Streep Claps Back At ‘The Devil Wears Prada’ Being A ‘chick Flick’ -
Uffizi Galleries Hit By Cyberattack, Valuables Moved To Bank -
Royal Family Secret Travel Rules: Why Members Always Pack A Black Outfit -
Why Google Launched The Gemma 4 AI Model: Here’s Everything To Know -
RAYE Addresses ‘fraudulent Album’ Claims And Issues Apology -
K-pop Star Mark Lee Announces Exit From NCT After 10 Years -
Was Kristi Noem Really 'blindsided' About Her Husband Crossdressing Life? Insiders Tell All -
Gene Mutation May Affect How Schizophrenia Patients See Reality -
From Coup To Presidency: Myanmar Junta Leader Tightens Grip On Power -
What Is Sarah Ferguson’s Memoir & Tell-all About? Mole Finally Speaks Out -
Global Energy Crisis: US Gas Price Hit $4 While Hong Kong Prices Soar To $15