‘India, Switzerland studying ways to share info on black money’

Swiss Minister in a letter defends country’s position in some matter

April 27, 2014 01:06 am | Updated November 16, 2021 08:00 pm IST - New Delhi:

New Delhi, 26/04/2014:  Finance Minister P.Chidambaram during a press conference at the AICC Hq in New Delhi on Saturday, March 26, 2014. Photo:R_V_Moorthy

New Delhi, 26/04/2014: Finance Minister P.Chidambaram during a press conference at the AICC Hq in New Delhi on Saturday, March 26, 2014. Photo:R_V_Moorthy

India and Switzerland are discussing ways of sharing information on specific accounts relating to black money stashed away in the European nation, Finance Minister P Chidambaram said here on Saturday.

The Minister said that he received a reply on his letter from his Swiss counterpart and would send India’s response in the next few days.

“This is a matter where the Swiss Minister and I are discussing with each other how information into specific account [relating to black money] can be provided by the Swiss government to Indian government,” Mr. Chidambaram said replying to a media query at the AICC headquarters.

On his letter to Swiss Finance Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf for revealing information on bank accounts in Switzerland, he said, “We have got a reply. I got a reply a week ago and we are working on a further letter now.”

As regard the content of the letter, he said, “it’s long reply and the Minister has defended the Swiss position in some matter. The Minister has made [a] conciliatory statement in one of the matters. The reply is being studied very carefully and we will send [a] further letter in the next few days.”

In his two-page letter to the Swiss Minister in March, Mr. Chidambaram threatened to drag the European nation to multilateral fora like G20 for continuing to block India's requests.

Mr. Chidambaram also reminded her of the April 2009 declaration adopted by G20 leaders stating that the “era of bank secrecy is over.”

Mr. Chidambaram had said Switzerland did not honour the terms of the Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement between the two nations, under which information about Indians with accounts in Swiss banks has been sought by the tax authorities.

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