SBI sends Vijay Mallya wilful defaulter notice
Mumbai: Days after United Bank of India declared Kingfisher Airlines Ltd (KFA), promoter Vijay Mallya and three other directors wilful defaulters, the country’s largest bank State Bank of India on Tuesday said it has also sent a notice to tag them as “wilful defaulters”.
“We have already sent a notice to KFA (to declare it as a wilful defaulter). There is a mandatory time that needs to be given to them to respond and that time is currently on,” said Arundhati Bhattacharya, chairperson of SBI.
SBI, which is the lead bank of a lender consortium to the crippled carrier, has an exposure of over Rs.1,600 crore. The airline owes Rs.7,600 crore to 17 banks.
In February 2012, the banks had formally declared a loan recall on KFA and began the recovery process. So far, they have recovered around Rs.2,000 crore by selling pledged shares. They are now working on selling two other pledged properties—Kingfisher Villa in Goa and Kingfisher House in Mumbai.
Already, United Bank of India has won a legal backing on its decision to declare Mallya and other top executives of the airline as wilful defaulters.
State-run Punjab National Bank (PNB) and IDBI Bank Ltd, and private lenders Federal Bank and Axis Bank Ltd are also in the process of doing the same. PNB, which has around Rs.800 crore to recover from the airline, and wants to tag the company as a wilful defaulter, has approached a division bench of the Delhi high court to stay a single-judge order that has allowed Mallya to send his lawyers to present his case.
According to banking norms, a defaulting borrower has to be personally present in the bank that seeks to declare him /her as wilful defaulter and can’t be represented through lawyers.
Citing the same, the Calcutta high court upheld United Bank’s decision on Mallya.
Asked about why SBI, the consortium leader that has the largest exposure to the airline, has been silent on the issue, she said, “Whatever is required to be done is being done. The process is already on but we don’t want to talk about any particular account in public as we would prefer working silently.”
Meanwhile, debt-ridden Kingfisher Airlines on Tuesday contested United Bank’s decision to declare it as a wilful defaulter, saying Reserve Bank of India guidelines in this regard do not apply to the company.