Mumbai, Oct. 5 -- The Surat Parsi Panchayat has written to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, urging him not to merge the 114-year-old Central Bank of India with other public-sector banks. Calling it India's first "swadeshi bank"-owned and managed by Indians-the charitable trust's president, Homi Doodhwala, requested Modi keep the bank's historical identity intact. "It has come to our attention through reliable sources that there is a possibility of merging Central Bank of India with other banks to create a bigger bank," the letter said. "By doing so, the Central Bank of India will cease to exist and will be rechristened as another bank with a new name, thereby relinquishing its original identity as India's first Swadeshi Bank." The Central Bank of India was founded by two Parsis, Sorabji Pochkhanawala and Pherozeshah Mehta, in 1911. It holds a significant place among the Parsi community as one of its greatest contributions to society. The panchayat's letter says that the formation of the bank was a direct outcome of the Swadeshi movement that began in 1905. Earlier reports have said the central government may lower its ownership in five public sector banks via stake sales or the lenders themselves selling shares to big investors, which will help them meet minimum public holding norms. Central Bank of India, UCO Bank, Bank of Maharashtra, Indian Overseas Bank, and Punjab and Sind Bank are the lenders in which the Centre could allow share sales by the Department of Investment and Public Asset Management, sources said.Kalyan Kumar, the newly appointed chairman and managing director of Central Bank of India, did not respond to messages and calls from this correspondent....