Punjab National Bank (PNB) has appointed Ashwini Pandey as General Manager and Data Protection Officer (DPO), underscoring the state-owned lender’s sharpened focus on cybersecurity, data governance and regulatory compliance amid rapid digitalisation of banking services in India.
The appointment positions Pandey at the centre of PNB’s efforts to strengthen customer data protection and build a resilient security framework across its operations, at a time when banks are grappling with rising cyber threats and stringent regulatory expectations. As General Manager and DPO, Ashwini will be responsible for steering data privacy policies, cybersecurity strategy, risk management practices and organisation-wide compliance with emerging data protection norms.
Industry observers note that the creation and elevation of dedicated data protection and cybersecurity leadership roles in large banks like PNB reflect a structural shift in how financial institutions view digital risk – not as a back-office function, but as a core pillar of business continuity and customer trust.
Pandey brings extensive experience in cybersecurity, information security governance, data protection management and banking security frameworks, along with exposure to regulatory compliance and digital risk management within the BFSI domain. His background is expected to help PNB strengthen its security posture across digital channels, cloud-based environments and AI-enabled banking services, which are becoming integral to customer engagement and internal operations.
With this appointment, PNB is expected to further refine its internal controls, monitoring mechanisms and reporting standards linked to data privacy and cyber resilience, aligning with both domestic regulations and global best practices. The bank’s enhanced focus on governance and accountability in data handling also signals a proactive stance ahead of evolving data protection frameworks in India.
The move comes amid a sustained increase in data breaches, phishing attempts, ransomware attacks and sophisticated financial frauds targeting banks and their customers worldwide. Regulators have been pressing financial institutions to adopt stronger security controls, improve incident response mechanisms and demonstrate robust governance over customer data, including clear accountability at senior leadership levels.







