An annual check on the Agricultural Bank of China, one of the
"big four" state banks in China, had uncovered irregularities
involving 51.6 billion yuan (US$6.45 billion) in its business in
2004, the National Audit Office announced Monday.
According to the latest audit report, "irregulate operation" was
cited as a "prominent problem" for the bank.
Irregularities in deposit business involved 14.27 billion yuan,
with another 27.62 billion yuan on granting loans, while the
fraudulous bill issuance involved 9.72 billion yuan, the report
said.
The deposit frauds included altering deposit categories,
embezzling clients' savings, opening undue accounts, the report
said, adding that violations in granting loans mainly existed in
fields like auto loans and land reservation loans, according to the
report.
"Some agricultural bank branches turned a blind eye on bill
issuance, causing numerous frauds," the report said.
Auditors also found 157 people suspicious for economic crimes in
57 fraud cases that involved 8.68 billion yuan. Some of these cases
were conspiracy set up by bank employees and outsiders, the report
said.
Loans granting to universities were categorized as a "high risk
business" in the report, as it said school's limited sources of
funding can hardly to pay back rising school loans.
The auditors launched the check on agricultural bank in 2005
over its 21 local branches in places such as Beijing, Tianjin and
Shanghai.
Among China's "Big Four", Agricultural Bank is the only one left
open to bank reforms. The three others have either converted to
joint-stock companies or sold shares to public investors.
(Xinhua News Agency, June 26, 2006)