Thursday, July 9, 2009

NRB urges police, RID, IRD to investigate NDB honchos

Nepal Rastra Bank (NRB) today formally requested the Nepal Police, Revenue Investigation Department (RID) and Inland Revenue Department (IRD) to thoroughly investigate into financial crimes involving the board of directors -- serving at different time till date -- of Nepal Development Bank (NDB), including the patron Uttam Pun and chairman Amar Gurung.
All of them have been accused of fraud, financial embezzlement and misuse amounting to a massive Rs 1.08 billion. The NRB has also sought for the Finance Ministry’s coordination in the investigation process.
“The troubled NDB board of directors, chief executive officers, advisors and managing directors — serving at different times — have not been abiding at all by directives of the central bank, risking the depositors and shareholders’ money, but benefitting themselves,” the central bank’s Supervision Department said in the letter to Police Headquarters written on Thursday. Similarly, the department also wrote to the RID and IRD to probe the source of income and banking transactions of Pun, Gurung and all other directors. The NRB Board had decided to take the help of police, RID and IRD on July 6.
The central bank also sought the Appellate Court’s approval to appoint liquidator to begin the liquidation process as the bank could not be revived and deserved to be sent to liquidation under Section 77 of the Bank and Financial Institution Act 2007. Before moving the Appellate Court, the central bank had also sought NDB’s clarification on why it should not be sent for liquidation. In response, the first development bank in the country could not furnish satisfactory clarification.
According to the NRB’s findings, the NDB has a huge loss of Rs 670.87 million, though it possesses a paid-up capital of Rs 320 million. It has total assets of Rs 730.13 million but its non-performing assets stand at 55.09 per cent and capital adequacy ratio is a whopping 48.31 per cent: that is almost five times more than the permissible limit of 11 per cent.
The NDB had Rs 720 million deposit of 32,000 depositors till mid-March. Of the total deposit, the bank has not been able to return Rs 330 million worth of institutional deposits of Employment Provident Fund and Nepal Army´s Welfare Fund even after expiry of maturity date. The EPF and Army’s deposit constitute around 45 per cent and 27 per cent of the total deposit, respectively.

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