City
Epaper

Cabinet approves ordinance for amendment to IBC

By IANS | Updated: December 24, 2019 19:50 IST

The Union Cabinet on Tuesday approved a proposal to promulgate an ordinance for the amendment of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC).

Open in App

The proposed amendment would provide protection to buyers from criminal proceedings against previous promoters of a bankrupt firm.

"Under the amendments, the liability of a corporate debtor for an offence committed prior to the commencement of the corporate insolvency resolution process shall cease, and the corporate debtor shall not be prosecuted for such an offence from the date the resolution plan has been approved by the adjudicating authority," an official statement said.

It further said that the liabilities would cease if the resolution plan results in the change in the management of the corporate debtor to a person who was not a promoter or in the management previously.

It would also be applicable if the person is not someone who the investigating authority finds to have conspired for the offence.

"Subject to relevant provisions the corporate debtor shall, as required, extend all assistance and co-operation to any authority investigating an offence committed prior to the commencement of the corporate insolvency resolution process," the statement said.

It noted that the amendment would remove certain ambiguities in the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016, and ensure smooth implementation of the code.

The government had on December 12 tabled a Bill in the Lok Sabha to amend the code, which along with protection of new buyers under IBC also sought to set a minimum requirement of the number of homebuyers for filing an insolvency plea against a developer.

The amendment would also pave the way for initiation of insolvency proceedings against a real estate entity only if a class of creditors approves it.

Also, the changes would protect the 'going concern status' of a company facing insolvency proceedings while providing protection to last-mile funding in financially distressed sectors.

According to the Bill, homebuyers willing to take the developer to an insolvency court will have to ensure that a minimum of 100 homebuyers or 10 per cent of the total homebuyers file for bankruptcy against the developer.

( With inputs from IANS )

Open in App

Related Stories

CricketRelentless and promising: Siraj-Krishna-Akash trio steps out of Bumrah's shadow, walks off from England with names etched in gold

CricketDPL 2025: All-round brilliance powers Purani Dilli 6 to 10-run win over New Delhi Tigers

International"A new world order is under construction", says foreign affairs expert on PM Modi's call with Putin

InternationalBRICS members help each other, that is where future and vision of BRICS is: Chairman BRICS Chamber of Commerce and Industry

International"India will buy oil from wherever it gets cheapest," says Tourism Expert Committee Chairman

कारोबार Realted Stories

BusinessIndia’s LPG price is among lowest in world despite imports: Hardeep Puri

BusinessIndia negotiating trade pacts with several nations, including US: Piyush Goyal

BusinessPublic sector banks post record Rs 44,218 crore profit in Q1 FY26, SBI leads

BusinessAir India crash: 65 families from India and the UK hire US law firm

BusinessIndia is well-equipped to tackle evolving online harms and cyber crimes: Minister