Key Points

The Kerala High Court has raised alarming concerns about cooperative banks systematically exploiting depositors' trust. Justice Devan Ramachandran condemned the rampant financial malpractices, comparing these institutions to predatory moneylenders. The judge highlighted how political patronage enables such unethical practices, leaving ordinary citizens financially vulnerable. His strong remarks underscore the urgent need for comprehensive banking reforms and stricter accountability mechanisms.

Key Points: Kerala HC Blasts Cooperative Banks Betraying Depositors

  • Kerala High Court criticizes cooperative bank mismanagement
  • Political affiliations compromise financial accountability
  • Depositors continuously lose hard-earned savings
  • Systemic corruption undermines banking integrity
3 min read

'Concerned over depositors' plight': Kerala HC flags issue of people losing money in cooperative banks

Justice Ramachandran exposes systemic failures in Kerala's cooperative banking, highlighting massive financial losses and political corruption

"Kerala is the No. 1 in the world in this. You will not return the money. - Justice Devan Ramachandran"

Kochi, June 5

With several cooperative banks in the state going bust in the past few years and with numerous cases getting registered, the Kerala High Court on Thursday expressed deep concern over the plight of the hapless depositors and also flagged the role of political parties.

Justice Devan Ramachandran, whose bench hears matters related to co-operative societies, observed that people who use such institutions in Kerala often do not get their money back.

"Kerala is the No. 1 in the world in this. You (the co-operative bank) will not return the money. People like you (creditors) who go and deposit money and other instruments in co-operative societies stand to lose money. There is no doubt about it," he said.

"Even today, people are going and depositing in co-operative societies. That is one of their ways of showing their allegiance to their political party. As long as this continues, nothing can happen. No court can help you, nothing can come to your aid when this is how the system functions. You lose your money," he orally remarked.

Justice Ramachandran then compared these co-operative banks to "blade companies", a colloquial reference in Kerala for moneylenders.

"I am concerned about what is happening in my state. I am in love with this state, and I can see where this is going. It is easy for us judges to dispose of these matters just saying there is an alternate remedy. But I am not doing it because I can see the plight of the ordinary people who are in front of me. And there is absolutely no support from the stakeholders for the high court. If a judge writes a judgment in favour of a common man, the attack is that the judge has some other political affiliation," Justice Ramachandran orally remarked.

He added that had Kerala been a true welfare state, the state government would have stepped in to aid those who had lost money to co-operative banks. "The fact is that you (the co-operative bank) have squandered the hard-earned money that people gave. A welfare state should have stepped in. This is the life of ordinary people. Why is it that the authorities have no heart at all?" he said.

The court made these observations while considering a review petition moved by the Chandanapally Service Cooperative Bank against an order directing it to return proceeds of the fixed deposit of Rosamma Rajan.

The bank blamed the government and its agencies for not recovering money for them, fixed against its earlier Secretary, who allegedly misappropriated large sums.

"Common man has no support in this State. You (petitioner) unfortunately have the common man tag. Find yourself a political affiliation, maybe then you will get your money. How many people in Kerala are suffering because they can't get their fixed deposits back? We are powerless now," added the judge.

These observation comes close on the heels of the Enforcement Directorate filing its final charge sheet recently in the alleged scam that took place at the Thrissur-based Karuvannur Cooperative Bank, with the list of accused including the CPI-M, its Lok Sabha member K.Radhakrishnan, legislator A.C. Moideen, and numerous other leaders from the district.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

Here are 6 diverse Indian user comments reflecting perspectives on the Kerala cooperative bank issue:
S
Sunil K.
This is heartbreaking. My aunt in Thrissur lost her entire retirement savings in one such bank. The political nexus is destroying common people's trust. Courts alone can't fix this - we need stronger banking regulations and political will. 😔
P
Priya M.
Justice Ramachandran speaking truth to power! In Kerala, even educated people blindly trust cooperative banks because of political affiliations. Time to wake up - your party won't return your money when things go wrong. Nationalized banks may be slower but safer.
R
Rajeev N.
While the judge's concern is valid, isn't it also people's responsibility to research before investing? Many knew these banks were politically backed but still deposited money hoping for favors. Both sides need accountability.
A
Anitha S.
Kerala's cooperative banks were once the pride of our financial system. My grandmother used to say they helped farmers during tough times. What happened to that ethos? Political interference has ruined everything. Shame!
V
Vijay P.
The "blade company" comparison hits hard! RBI should step in and audit all cooperative banks in Kerala immediately. People's hard-earned money can't become political party funds. This is daylight robbery with permission.
M
Meena R.
As someone who worked in banking, I can say this: Kerala needs financial literacy campaigns urgently. People must understand deposit insurance limits and risks. Your loyalty to any party shouldn't blind you to financial safety. #WakeUpKerala

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