Watch out, you may be holding a fake Rs 500 note

Around Rs 1,69,000 crore of fake money is in the system. And it’s growing
with frightening rapidity. TOI checks out the rising threat



   *Last month when Maharashtra Crime Branch and Anti-terrorism Squad
sleuths caught six persons with counterfeit currency worth over Rs 9 lakh,
they themselves couldn’t make out the difference between the fake and
genuine notes. ‘‘They have 95% features of genuine notes,’’ says an
official. The provisions of the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA)
have been invoked — for the first time against fake currency.
   * *
Zahoor Ahmad Mir of Rawalpora, Srinagar, withdrew Rs 2,000 from an ATM. He
was told by a shopkeeper after his weekend shopping that the currency was
fake. A frantic Zahoor rushed to the bank, the ATM of which had coughed up
the 500-rupee notes. ‘‘But the bank officials refused to accept it. They
suspected I had got the fake note from somewhere else,’’ he says.

*The proliferation of fake Rs 500 notes has just got bigger. You never know
when you are holding one — or more. Even ATMs are disgorging them,
indicating the counterfeits are so good that bankers are failing to detect
them. Despite measures taken by RBI, the home ministry and intelligence
agencies, the fear of the fake has grown — from Kashmir to Kanyakumari, from
Gujarat to Assam.
   Officials say there’s a high volume of fake notes of Rs 100, Rs 500 and
Rs 1,000 in the market, and that they have had limited success so far in
controlling their spread. The Naik Committee, set up to assess the menace of
fake currency, says counterfeit money in the range of Rs 1,69,000 crore is
sloshing around the system. And just a tiny fraction of it has been seized:
Rs 63 crore.
   Both the government and common people are aware of the problem, but feel
ill equipped to deal with it. In Chandigarh, traders, banks employees and
petrol pump attendants turn suspicious whenever they get a Rs 500 note. ‘‘A
petrol station attendant refused to accept the Rs 500 note I gave him and
warned me about the glut of fake notes in the market,’’ said Rajinder Singh,
a resident of Sector-27.
   Even in Delhi, shopkeepers take extra time to accept high denomination
notes. Most make sure to first hold the note against bright light and ensure
that the watermark is intact.
   Many in Kerala are worried over outsourcing loading of currency in the
ATMs to private agencies.‘‘My salary account is with a private bank and I
also have a savings account with SBI. Lest I should get a counterfeit note,
I have now started transferring money only by cheques,’’ says A K
Nair, a government
employee.
   ‘‘The extent of the problem can be gauged from the huge gap between
actual seizures and circulation of fake Indian currency notes (FICN).
Although several steps have been taken by the finance ministry and RBI,
weeding out FICNs may take long,’’ says a senior home ministry official.
   According to security agencies, Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, Maharashtra,
Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka have reported the maximum seizure of fake notes
in recent years.
   The latest haul in Ghaziabad, Noida and Meerut reveal how organized
gangs, said to be funded by Pakistan, have penetrated right up to Delhi’s
borders.
   Shopkeepers’ associations in Delhi are actively involved in monitoring
the counterfeits, many of which come out of ATMs and banks.
   Despite measures taken by RBI, the home ministry and intelligence
agencies, the number of fake currency notes in the market has grown. Says
Sanjeev Mehra, president of Delhi’s Khan Market Traders’ Association,
‘‘Every shopkeeper has been issued a circular listing 10 ways of detecting a
fake note. The local bank in the market has an officer posted for this very
purpose.’’
   Experienced shop-keepers feel the texture of the note, particularly when
it’s of a large denomination, and hold it under lights to see the
water-mark. However, if this year’s three major seizures — amounting to over
Rs 35 lakh — in UP and Maharashtra are any indication, it’s the quality of
FICN that has alarmed the security agencies.
   The paper, say intelligence sleuths, is almost identical to the original,
which makes their identification very tough.
   The UP STF suggests most of these notes were printed in the security
press at Malir Cantonment in Karachi and three other printing presses in
Pakistan. Maharashtra’s security agencies, too, believe that the fake notes
seized by them were printed in a Pakistan government printing press at
Quetta.
   Fearful businessmen and shopkeepers are installing machines to check
counterfeits. In Kerala, the state-run SUPPLYCO (Kerala State Civil Supplies
Corporation Limited) with 12 petrol pumps has issued specific instructions
to its outlets to be wary of fake notes.
   But there are limitations. For instance, large business outlets that
handle heavy transactions can’t run a counterfeit check every time it
receives cash.
*
TAKE NOTE OF FAKES

*
   *The cost of manufacturing a fake Rs 1,000 note is about
Rs 400 *
   *
Making, keeping, distributing or using fake notes comes under organized
crime

*
   *Punishment: Can go up to
LIFE SENTENCE *
*
Amount of fake currency suspected in market: Rs 1,69,000cr

**Amount seized by authorities so far:
Rs 63cr *
*
14 ARRESTED

*In last two years across India; two alleged Bangladeshis with fake notes
killed in encounter
*
THE LeT LINK

*An LeT terrorist in J&K caught talking to his handlers in Pak in Jan 2008
about fake notes *

Fake note alert at petrol pumps

*
   Fearful businessmen and shopkeepers are installing machines to check
counterfeits. In Kerala, the state-run SUPPLYCO (Kerala State Civil Supplies
Corporation Limited) with 12 petrol pumps has issued specific instructions
to its outlets to be wary of fake notes. But there are limitations. For
instance, large business outlets that handle heavy transactions can’t run a
counterfeit check every time it receives cash. ‘‘During a hectic day, one
can’t check every Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 note,’’ says Mujtaba Haaziq,
manufacturer of signages in Panaji. ‘‘In any case, it’s the government’s job
to tackle the problem,’’ says Barnabe Sapeco, a well-known Panaji
restaurateur.
   The police say arresting the carriers has not taken them to FICN
masterminds. ‘‘The carriers are briefed on a need-to-know basis and are not
aware of the entire network,’’ said a Maharshtra crime branch official.
Intelligence agencies are fairly certain that the brains behind the FICN
racket are sitting in Bangladesh and Pakistan. As proof, they cite the
seizure of an Indian currency-minting machine in Bangladesh in 2006.
   *(With inputs from Vishwa Mohan & Richi Verma (Delhi), Mateen Hafiz
(Mumbai), Pervez Iqbal Siddiqui (Lucknow), Anantha Krishnan,
(Thiruvananthapuram), Anand Bodh (Chandigarh), Saleem Pandit (Srinagar) and
Gauree Malkarlekar (Panaji) *

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