This issue will be discussed at an annual meeting of the Tojik Sodirot Bonk (TSB), which is scheduled to March 17.
TSB shareholders are also expected to review the results of the activity of this distressed bank in 2017.
According to the TSB press center, a report of international and external auditors on the results of bank’s activity in 2017 will be submitted for consideration of the shareholders.
The meeting is also planned to discuss issues related to return of illegally sold shares of the bank.
Recall, the deputy head of the Accounts Chamber of Tajikistan, Zafar Azimi, at the end of January accused the TSB top managers of illegally selling of par of the bank’s shares.
In a report released at a news conference in Dushanbe, Azimi noted on January 22 that a total amount of the revealed illegal sale of the TSB shares is some 64 million somoni.
As it had been reported earlier, TSB, which is one of Tajikistan’s failing banks, embarked on a desperate fire sale in order to pay out savings to its customers in early January this year. .
The bank is currently seeking buyers for its seven facilities located in Dushanbe, including shops, drug stores and shopping malls, according to the TSB press center.
Among the items for sale listed on the TSB website are the bank’s properties located in ten cities and districts of the country.
Assets on TSB’s books reportedly include the bank headquarters in Dushanbe, 43 branches across the country, Closed Joint Stock Company (CJSC) Dushanbe Mall (Tajikistan’s largest shopping mall, which is home to the country's first ever hypermarket to be part of the French Auchan chain), Tajikistan Hotel in Dushanbe, eight nine-story apartment buildings in Danghara district (Khatlon province), spinning mills in Danghara and Farkhor districts (Khatlon province), cotton ginneries in Khatlon province, and auto-repair enterprise.
TSB’s customers include some foreigners, including Afghan diplomats. One of them has told Radio Liberty’s Tajik Service that he and three other Afghan diplomats have failed to withdraw their savings totaling 300,000 USD from TSB for already three years.
They had reportedly put those funds in their accounts in TSB while they had worked with Afghan diplomatic mission in Dushanbe. Former Afghan diplomats intend to file lawsuit against TSB, according to RFE/RL’s Tajik Service.
Four local commercial banks, including TSB, have been experiencing liquidity issues since 2015. Parliament in December 2016 approved a government decree to issue bonds to recapitalize the mentioned banks. TSB and Agroinvestbonk were topped up by 2.25 billion somoni (US$284 million) and 1.7 billion somoni (US$215 million) respectively.
TSB was established in December 1990 as the Tajik branch of the Vnesh Econom Bank of the former Soviet Union, and it initially specialized in trade and import-export banking. Later this branch was reorganized into a Joint-Stock Commercial Bank “Tajikvnesheconombank”. In June 1999 the bank was renamed and registered as Tojik Sodirot Bonk or TSB.
Headquartered in Dushanbe, TSB has 11 branches in the main cities of Tajikistan and covering all regions of the country.