Delhi HC is taking the issue of inaccessible currency seriously. Read
the PTI Feed today.  AICB has once again stood strong while fighting
it out in the Court.
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/business/india-business/will-ask-visually-challenged-to-examine-new-notes-hc/articleshow/62948864.cms

New Delhi, Feb 16 () The Delhi High Court today said it would consider
asking some visually impaired persons to examine the new currency
notes and coins
recently issued by the government to see if they faced problems
differentiating between the various denominations.

A bench of Acting Chief Justice Gita Mittal and Justice C Hari Shankar
made the observation after the Centre and the Reserve Bank of India
(RBI) told the
court the new currency has been introduced after consulting and taking
into account the suggestions made by various associations for the
visually impaired.

The central government, represented by Additional Standing Counsel
Sanjay Jain, told the court that Rs 10 note would be soon done away
with and replaced
by coins. The sizes of the Rs 20 and Rs 50 denomination notes could be
easily differentiated by blind persons, it claimed.

The government and the RBI told the court that intaglio markings, a
printing technique where image is incised into a surface, are not
being made in the
Rs 20 and Rs 50 notes as these denominations are widely used, as these
markings, which are expensive, would get smudged with time.

However, the notes of denominations of Rs 100 and above have the
intaglio markings, they told the bench.

The ASG also said that the new coins of Re 1, Rs 2, Rs 5 and Rs 10
would be having striations of various lengths at the edges to make
them discernible
from each other.

The court asked the Centre to file an affidavit on the steps it was
taking to make the coins discernible from each other and listed the
matter for next
hearing on March 7.

The bench was hearing PILs filed by three advocates, a company
secretary and NGO All India Confederation of Blind, who had sought a
change in the new currency
notes to make them easily identifiable and differentiable for the
visually impaired.

The PIL by advocate Rohit Dandriyal sought directions to the
authorities to withdraw the Rs 50 notes which do not have any
identification marks and stop
printing them.

He said that, according to the RBI, a special feature has been
introduced on the left of the watermark window on all notes, except
the Rs 10 denomination
ones.

"This feature is in different shapes for various denominations. For
example, a vertical rectangle denotes a Rs 20 note, a square means Rs
50 (in older
notes), triangle and circle for Rs 100, a diamond denoted the Rs 1,000
currency which is not a legal tender now," the advocate's PIL said.

The petition by the NGO said the visually impaired people were facing
hardship in identification, usage and transaction of the new currency
notes of Rs
2000, Rs 500, Rs 200 and Rs 50 denominations.

Maintaining that the size of old and new notes were different, the NGO
also sought replacement of coins of Rs 10, Rs 5, Rs 2 and Re 1 saying
these were
of a similar structure. HMP PPS ARC


-- 
Avinash Shahi
Doctoral student at Centre for Law and Governance JNU

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