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Man takes sister’s skeletal remains to Odisha bank to prove her death — all for Rs 20,000

Bank officials had told the man that the account holder must be present or the legal heir documents must be produced

Frustrated over repeated denial by bank officials to withdraw the savings of his dead sister from a rural bank, a tribal man in Odisha’s Keonjhar district exhumed her skeletal remains “to prove that she died two months ago”.

The incident occurred at the Mallipasi branch of Odisha Grameen Bank under Keonjhar’s Patna block. Even before the bank started operation on Monday, 59-year-old Jitu Munda of Dianali village reached the bank branch carrying the skeletal remains in a plastic sack for around 3 km, placed it outside the bank branch, and demanded the release of Rs 20,000 deposited in her account.

A man in Odisha dug up his deceased sister’s grave and brought her skeleton to the bank Just to prove she had died.

He had been trying to withdraw ₹20,000 from her account, but bank officials kept insisting he bring the account holder in person. Despite repeatedly telling them… pic.twitter.com/hICEqwvPFu

— Woke Eminent (@WokePandemic) April 28, 2026

Officials said Jitu’s elder sister, Kalra Munda, 62, died on January 26. Since she has no legal heir and has not nominated anyone, the bank officials reportedly refused to release her savings and told Jitu that the account holder must be present or the legal heir documents must be produced.

Distressed, Jitu took the extreme step, officials said.

On receiving information about the incident, the police immediately reached the bank branch, pacified him and told him to go to the tehsil office to get the legal heir certificate so he could withdraw the money. The police took away the skeletal remains and buried them again.

Inspector-in-charge of Patna police station, Kiran Prasad Sahu, said the man doesn’t know what a legal heir or nominee means as he is not educated. “The bank officials failed to make him understand the procedure to withdraw the money from the account,” said the officer.

Kalra Munda had earlier lost her husband and only child, and Jitu was her sole surviving relative.

Though the local administration swung into action and directed the bank officials to release the money in favour of Jitu as soon as possible, Patna block development officer Manas Dandapat said he has not been approached by anyone. “We would have made arrangements much earlier,” said the official.

Sources said the district administration has sought a report from authorities about the incident. The bank staff refused to comment on the issue.

Sujit Bisoyi is a Special Correspondent with the Indian Express and covers Odisha. His interests are in politics, policy and people’s stories. He tweets at @bisoyisujit87 ... Read More

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Frustrated over repeated denial by bank officials to withdraw the savings of his dead sister from a rural bank, a tribal man in Odisha’s Keonjhar district exhumed her skeletal remains “to prove that she died two months ago”.

The incident occurred at the Mallipasi branch of Odisha Grameen Bank under Keonjhar’s Patna block. Even before the bank started operation on Monday, 59-year-old Jitu Munda of Dianali village reached the bank branch carrying the skeletal remains in a plastic sack for around 3 km, placed it outside the bank branch, and demanded the release of Rs 20,000 deposited in her account.

A man in Odisha dug up his deceased sister’s grave and brought her skeleton to the bank Just to prove she had died.

He had been trying to withdraw ₹20,000 from her account, but bank officials kept insisting he bring the account holder in person. Despite repeatedly telling them… pic.twitter.com/hICEqwvPFu

— Woke Eminent (@WokePandemic) April 28, 2026

Officials said Jitu’s elder sister, Kalra Munda, 62, died on January 26. Since she has no legal heir and has not nominated anyone, the bank officials reportedly refused to release her savings and told Jitu that the account holder must be present or the legal heir documents must be produced.

Distressed, Jitu took the extreme step, officials said.

On receiving information about the incident, the police immediately reached the bank branch, pacified him and told him to go to the tehsil office to get the legal heir certificate so he could withdraw the money. The police took away the skeletal remains and buried them again.

Inspector-in-charge of Patna police station, Kiran Prasad Sahu, said the man doesn’t know what a legal heir or nominee means as he is not educated. “The bank officials failed to make him understand the procedure to withdraw the money from the account,” said the officer.

Kalra Munda had earlier lost her husband and only child, and Jitu was her sole surviving relative.

Though the local administration swung into action and directed the bank officials to release the money in favour of Jitu as soon as possible, Patna block development officer Manas Dandapat said he has not been approached by anyone. “We would have made arrangements much earlier,” said the official.

Sources said the district administration has sought a report from authorities about the incident. The bank staff refused to comment on the issue.

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