Two more of Japan's big banks were implicated Monday in a widening bribery scandal involving officials at the powerful Ministry of Finance (MOF).
Tokyo prosecutors issued fresh arrest warrants against two ministry inspectors, who are already in police custody, on suspicion that they accepted lavish entertainment from Sumitomo Bank and the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi (BTM) in exchange for confidential information.
The issue of the warrants meant that six of Japan's ten major city banks have now been implicated in the scandal.
The officials were arrested last month on suspicion of taking similar favors from four other banks - Asahi, Dai-Ichi Kangyo, Sanwa and Hokkaido Takushoku. Prosecutors indicted the two on bribery charges involving these banks Monday.
Koichi Miyakawa is accused of receiving about 1.3 million yen ($10,300) worth of bribes in the form of wining and dining from Sumitomo Bank, Asahi Bank and Sanwa Bank, while Toshimi Taniuchi was suspected of receiving more than two million yen ($15,800) worth of bribes from BTM, Sumitomo and Dai-Ichi Kangyo, prosecutors said.
Banks have pledged to abolish their so-called "MOF handler'' system, under which officials are assigned to wine and dine ministry officials in return for confidential information such as the schedule of the supposedly surprise inspections.
Japan also enacted two laws Monday to provide up to 30 trillion yen ($238 billion) to help prop up the banking sector, but still unresolved was the issue of what standards would be employed in deciding which banks get public funds. Who bribes the best??/
That issue became murkier with the latest allegations against the two top banks, as some legislators have said banks linked to the scandal should not get any funds.
Yet with six top banks now involved, such a rule would make it difficult to carry out the program effectively.
The scandal has jolted the powerful Finance Ministry and led to the resignation of Hiroshi Mitsuzuka as finance minister last month, as well as some of the ministry's top bureaucrats.
The ministry belatedly fired the two bank inspectors on Monday, and the new finance minister, Hikaru Matsunaga, said that possible punishments for supervisors of the two suspects would be considered after investigations were completed.
"Such acts by inspectors are impermissible and I find them very regrettable,'' Matsunaga said in a written statement.
Sumitomo and BTM issued separate statements saying they regretted the situation but declined comment on the details of the case on the grounds that investigations were still going on.
"We take the situation seriously and will continue to offer our cooperation with the investigation,'' Sumitomo said.
Meanwhile, the business daily Nihon Keizai Shimbun reported that Satoru Kishi, BTM president and the chairman of the Federation of Bankers Associations of Japan, may resign over the allegations. |