New Delhi: Half a century before it discovered a 11,400 crore rupee scam by its officials to help billionaire jeweller Nirav Modi, Punjab National Bank (PNB) loaned rupees 5,000 to the country’s most powerful man and got it all back – even though he died before he could repay it.
The loan was taken in 1965 by then Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri for a Fiat car, the Economic Times reported.
When the Shastris learnt that a new car would cost Rs. 12,000, far more than the Rs. 7,000 they had in the bank, the Prime Minister applied for a loan and got it the same day.
Congress lawmaker Shashi Tharoor was among those who shared the story, which left many dazed about the incredible honesty of an iconic leader who was austere to a fault.
When Mr Shastri’s loan was approved quickly, he told the bank that the common man should have the same privilege.
Mr Shastri died in office in 1966, while on a visit to Tashkent to sign a peace agreement that ended the India-Pakistan war. When the bank wrote to his wife Lalita Shastri for the Rs. 5,000 he owed, she promised to pay them back in instalments from her family pension. She repaid every rupee, says the report.
In response to tweets, the former prime minister’s grandson Adarsh Shastri confirmed the story.
The cream-coloured car, a 1964 model Fiat, is on display at the Lal Bahadur Shastri memorial in Delhi.
PNB was founded in 1894. Today, it is at the centre of India’s biggest bank fraud.
(Source: NDTV)