Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

British Indians Sending Old Notes Home On Flights With Friends

Darpan News Desk IANS, 29 Nov, 2016 01:27 PM
    British Indians are calling for an extension to a deadline which could see some of their cash become worthless by the end of December, as part of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's shock decision earlier this month to abolish Rs. 500 and Rs. 1,000 banknotes.
     
    The looming December 30 deadline has rattled many British Indians, who make up 2.5 per cent of the population of England and Wales according to a 2011 UK government census, because the notes can only be exchanged in India.
     
    "I have been getting hundreds and hundreds of calls," said the president of the National Congress Of Gujarati Organisations UK (NCGO), CJ Rabheru.
     
     
    "They have no clue what the hell is happening," Mr Rabheru said, adding that many of his members are confused by rumours regarding the status of their cash in a move that he said was likely to affect at least 1 million people in Britain.
     
    Although supportive of Mr Modi's effort to fight counterfeiting, Mr Rabheru said many people are scrambling to find flights to India or asking friends and relatives to carry cash for them.
     
    The notes are being abolished in a move to crack down on forgeries and the shadow economy but the withdrawal of denominations that account for 86 per cent of the cash in circulation in India have brought India's cash economy to a virtual standstill.
     
    Britain's longest-serving Indian-origin lawmaker Keith Vaz has called on Mr Modi to extend the deadline for foreign nationals until mid-2017.
     
    "The Indian government should be commended on this bold and courageous policy, and I completely understand why they have taken these steps," Mr Vaz was quoted as saying.
     
    "However, the rupee recall has inadvertently caused concern and distress to many members of the Indian diaspora community who live abroad who fear they will be unable to exchange their currency by the deadline in December."
     
    Mr Vaz has written to Bank of England Governor Mark Carney asking for a solution to allow British Indians to exchange their bank notes in the UK.
     
    "Why do we have to go to India to exchange our currency? That I don't understand," said Mahendrasinh Jadeja, vice president of the British Organisation of People of Indian Origin.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Ohio Police Post Graphic Photo Of Overdosed Parents In SUV With 4-Year-Old Child In Backseat

    Ohio Police Post Graphic Photo Of Overdosed Parents In SUV With 4-Year-Old Child In Backseat
    East Liverpool police say in a Facebook message they’re sorry if people are offended but they want the public to see what happens and they want to be a voice for the boy who witnessed the scene.

    Ohio Police Post Graphic Photo Of Overdosed Parents In SUV With 4-Year-Old Child In Backseat

    Grumpy Looking Insta-Famous Dog Helps Pay Owner's Tuition Fee

    Grumpy Looking Insta-Famous Dog Helps Pay Owner's Tuition Fee
    Jasmine Milton, 20, from Shropshire bought her two-year- old pup Anuko as a way of helping her battle with her bipolar disorder.

    Grumpy Looking Insta-Famous Dog Helps Pay Owner's Tuition Fee

    Bears Wander Into Northern Ontario Restaurant, Sow Killed, Cubs Taken To Sanctuary

    Bears Wander Into Northern Ontario Restaurant, Sow Killed, Cubs Taken To Sanctuary
    Ontario Provincial Police say they were called to the restaurant in Terrace Bay on Wednesday after the animals entered an open back door and started causing damage.

    Bears Wander Into Northern Ontario Restaurant, Sow Killed, Cubs Taken To Sanctuary

    Disabled Kerala Swimmer To Campaign Against Terrorism

    Disabled Kerala Swimmer To Campaign Against Terrorism
    He is 51 and physically challenged. But nothing will stop E.D. Baburaj of Kuttanad from swimming 25 km non-stop on October 14 to campaign against what he calls the sinister menace of terrorism.

    Disabled Kerala Swimmer To Campaign Against Terrorism

    Mark Zuckerberg Faces Flak After Facebook Removes 'Napalm Girl' Photo

    Mark Zuckerberg Faces Flak After Facebook Removes 'Napalm Girl' Photo
    The editor-in-chief of Norways biggest daily newspaper has criticised Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg over his role in deleting an article from Aftenposten's Facebook page containing a historic image from the Vietnam war.

    Mark Zuckerberg Faces Flak After Facebook Removes 'Napalm Girl' Photo

    Mark Zuckerberg Philanthropic Arm Leads $50 Million Investment Into BYJU

    Mark Zuckerberg Philanthropic Arm Leads $50 Million Investment Into BYJU
    Online education start-up BYJU's has raised $50 million (about $332.3 crore) from a clutch of investors, led by Chan Zuckerberg Initiative (CZI) and Sequoia Capital.

    Mark Zuckerberg Philanthropic Arm Leads $50 Million Investment Into BYJU