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Explained: Rs 25,000 Crore Maharashtra Cooperative Bank Scam In Which Sharad Pawar Is A Key Accused

Swarajya Staff Sep 27, 2019, 05:33 PM | Updated 05:33 PM IST

NCP leader Sharad Pawar and Congress leader P Chidambaram (Source: Twitter)


The screws seem to be tightening around NCP leader Sharad Pawar in the Maharashtra State Co-operative (MSC) Bank fraud case.

Apart from Pawar himself, his nephew and former deputy chief minister Ajit Pawar and 70 other officials of MSC Bank are also indicted in the Enforcement Case Information Report (ECIR) by Enforcement Directorate (ED). ECIR is equivalent to a police FIR.

Sharad Pawar has called the report a result of the 'huge' response he received during his Maharashtra Assembly election campaign that had riled up his opponents.

Pawar also sarcastically 'thanked' the central agency for naming him in the case and said, “I have no problem if I have to go to jail. I will be pleased as I have never had this experience. If someone plans to send me to jail, I welcome it.”

He also said that he would not “bow down before Delhi rulers.”

Allegations

The allegations are that the directors of the MSC bank, a state-owned cooperative bank sanctioned loans in a fraudulent manner for the personal benefit of the bank officials’ associates, thereby cheating the bank's shareholders.

The scam is said to have occurred between 2001 and 2011, and is pegged at Rs 25,000 crore. There are allegations that loan irregularities alone between 2007 and 2011 amounted to Rs 297 crore.

Most of MSC Bank’s 48 directors at the time were elected representatives from various political parties, including Ajit Pawar, Anand Adsul and Dilip Deshmukh, among others.

The agency has also named Isharlal Jain, Jayant Patil, Shivaji Rao Nalvade, Rajendra Shingane and Madan Patil.

Reportedly, the bank officials having personal relationships with office bearers and directors of local co-operative sugar factories (CSFs), spinning mills and other processing units, sanctioned loans to them despite their weak financials, negative net worth and no collateral.

Due to alleged mismanagement and under-utilisation of capacity, these CSFs turned sick and were later sold to the board.

It is alleged that the board bought these for less than the reserve price thus resulting in wrongful gains for the purchaser. In some cases, no rules were followed to fix the prices.

According to Moneycontol, ED is also probing allegations of forging fake sale certificates that showed the sale amount to be much higher than the actual number.

Different reports

A National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (Nabard) inspection report in 2010 pointed out the irregularities. Next year, a chargesheet under the Maharashtra Cooperative Societies was filed. An audit report by Joshi and Naik Associates might also be utilised by the probe.

The NABARD report notes: The bank gave loans/credit limits “without obtaining credit authorisation from Nabard for financing of Infrastructure Projects and credit limits to Cotton Marketing Federations and sold properties of borrowing units acquired under SARFAESI Act, 2002, below the reserve price”.

“It distributed incentives to co-operative societies/bank toward centenary year celebrations despite the fact that the bank had not declared a dividend for the past several years; sanctioned loan/ additional loans contrary to recommendations, and extended the due date of repayments to conceal NPAs”, adds the report.

The main complainant before the Mumbai Police Surinder Arora also made a supplementary statement saying that the “scam couldn’t have happened without the ‘tutorial’ of Sharad Pawar”.

The 2011 chargesheet notes: “The executive committee of the bank, consisting of Ajit Pawar and others, decided to sell off the properties of Akola Zilla SSK for Rs 17.10 crore, much below the reserve price of Rs 25.16 crore, as well as Kondeshwar SSK at Rs 14.01 crore against the reserve price of Rs 17.10 crore”.

This decision was reportedly taken in a meeting held on 30 December 2009, only with a dishonest intention to (help) wrongful purchasers who had personal or political nexus with the board of directors

This FIR is being relied upon by the ED for investigating Pawar under provisions of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act.

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