Court also asks RBI to provide within six weeks the list of companies whose loans have been restructured.
The Supreme Court today directed the RBI to provide a list of companies,
which had defaulted bank loans of over Rs. 500 crore while expressing
serious concern over the rise in bad loans.
The apex court also asked the Reserve Bank of India to provide within
six weeks the list of
companies whose loans have been restructured under
corporate debt restructuring schemes.
A bench headed by Chief Justice T.S. Thakur asked for the list of loan
defaulters to be placed before it in a sealed cover within six weeks.
The bench, also comprising Justices U.U. Lalit and R. Banumathi, wanted
to know how the state-owned banks and financial institutions were
advancing large-scale loans without proper guidelines and whether there
was adequate mechanism to recover them.
The court made RBI party to a PIL filed in 2005 by an NGO Centre for
Public Interest Litigation (CPIL), in which it has raised the issue of
loans advanced to some companies by state-owned Housing and Urban
Development Corporation (HUDCO).
Advocate Prashant Bhushan, appearing for CPIL, submitted that about Rs. 40,000 crore of corporate debt was written off in 2015.
His submission evoked response from the bench which said that bad debts
were plaguing the public sector banks. The bench also expressed surprise
that no concrete steps were taken for the recovery of loan from the
defaulters.
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