The Free Press Journal

No claimants for a dozen idle Indian Swiss accounts

Some may get liquidated soon; two of these are from Mumbai

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No claimants have come forward for about a dozen dormant Swiss bank accounts linked to Indians, leaving the funds lying in these accounts at the risk of getting transferre­d to the Switzerlan­d government.

Under the Swiss laws, a bank account is declared dormant after there is no customer contact for 60 years.

The Swiss government began making details of dormant accounts public in 2015 to allow their claimants to submit necessary proof to get access to those funds.

As per the details available with the Swiss banking ombudsman, the dormant accounts linked to Indians that are waiting for their claimants include at least two persons from Kolkata, one from Dehradun, two from Mumbai and also some Indians settled in France and the UK.

The claim period for two such accounts -- which are in the names of Leila Talukdar and Prmatha N Talukdar -would end next month on November 15, while the assets can be claimed till December this year for accounts in the names of Chandralat­a Pranlal Patel, Mohan Lal and Kishore Lall.

In case of two Bombay-residents -- Rosmarie Bernet and Pierre Vachek -- the claim period would expire next year in December 2020, while similar is the case for the account of Chandra Bahadur Singh from Dehradun and Yogesch Prabhudas Suchah, whose last recorded residence was in London.

Some of the dormant accounts are linked to Indian nationals from the British era.

Ironically, not a single dormant account linked to an Indian has been successful­ly claimed in the last six years, as per the records available with the Swiss authoritie­s.

Incidental­ly, some of the accounts linked to Pakistan residents have been claimed since 2015,

as is the case with several other accounts linked to residents from other countries, including Switzerlan­d itself.

The list included close to 2,600 dormant accounts when it was first made public in December 2015, which had around 45 million Swiss francs (over Rs 300 crore) lying unclaimed since at least 1955. There were also nearly 80 safety unclaimed deposit boxes when the list was first made public for claims from the real owners or their heirs.

More accounts are being added every year since then after they become dormant under the Swiss banking laws and the list now includes nearly 3,500 accounts.

While Swiss bank accounts have been a matter of heated political debate for many years in India due to suspicion that they were being used to hoard alleged black money, it has also been suspected that people linked to the erstwhile princely states had stashed some funds in banks in Switzerlan­d.

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