JAIPUR: A former senior official of a nationalized bank has accused the chief vigilance commissioner's (CVC) office of withholding information for over a year on his appeal against his conviction in a matter of financial irregularity.
Jaipur-based Manish Bhansali, a former chief manager with the Bank of Baroda's international business branch in the city was terminated from the job over his conviction by the CVC office on charges of releasing Rs 1.30 crore to an exports company on the basis of fake bills. Bhansali, who disputed approving the bills before the inquiry officer in 2001, has been requesting the CVC office since March last year to get his case re-examined as the signatures attributed to him on the bills were allegedly forged.
"The CVC office is responding on my appeal in no way, though I have been regularly writing to it and meeting its officials in New Delhi for over a year now," Bhansali told TOI on Thursday.
The irregularity related to the illegal release of Rs 1.30 crore to the exports firm is said to have been detected and reported by Bhansali to the bank in 1996. The former bank officer has now got the signatures on the disputed bills examined by a Rajasthan police's ex-forensic expert, who found them to be forged.
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