Angry depositors of the PMC Bank have asked the government to intervene

The Congress on Friday demanded a white paper on the Punjab Maharashtra Cooperative (PMC) Bank scam to ascertain what had happened that led to a crisis in the bank and who were responsible for it.

Congress spokesperson Gaurav Vallabh accused the BJP government of "ruining" the financial sector in the country that has brought about a "trust deficit on India's banking system" among the people.

He said people are anxious going by the scams and mergers happening in the banking sector that they do not know where to put their savings, as there could be restrictions on taking their own money out.

The Congress leader said the Finance Ministry and the RBI cannot absolve themselves from taking responsibility of the scam in the bank, as under the law the central bank and the ministry is supposed to check the happening of any fraud and monitor banks.

Noting that Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman cannot skip her responsibility, he said, "You have the responsibility madam".

"If the Modi government had no role to play in the recent developments relating to the PMC Bank, if there is no responsibility of RBI, Ministry of Finance, then why you restrict withdrawal limits for depositors under the Banking Regulation Act, 1949?" Mr Vallabh said, adding that the restrictions were announced under the Act relating to all urban cooperative banks in the country.

Mr Vallabh asked what action has the RBI and the government taken against the directors of PMC Bank and demanded that the report should be presented within 15 days on what collateral were taken from HDIL.

"The finance ministry should come out with a white paper as to what really happened in PMC Bank and who are the people responsible for it," he said, seeking to know why the RBI and the ministry "ignored the warnings" in the case.

Mr Vallabh demanded that the withdrawal limit restrictions imposed on PMC Bank account holders be removed immediately and asked to find out what collateral security was taken from the promoters of realty firm HDIL, to whom the bank has lent 73 per cent of its total loans in "clear violation" of banking norms. "If this is not a scam, then what is it?" he asked.