Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
India

Elderly Dies In Queue As India Battles Cash Chaos

IANS, 15 Nov, 2016 12:16 PM
    A 70-year-old man died on Tuesday while standing in a queue outside a bank in Andhra Pradesh as common people across India continued to struggle for cash, the way they have been doing since the government spiked high value currency notes a week ago.
     
    Lakshminarayana, 75, collapsed while waiting in a long queue for over two hours at an Andhra Bank branch in Marredpally in Secunderabad, the twin city of Hyderabad, witnesses said.
     
    He was rushed to a hospital where doctors declared him dead due to cardiac arrest. A resident of Railway Colony in Secunderabad, he had gone to deposit Rs.1.7 lakh in scrapped currency notes of Rs 500 and 1,000.
     
    The witnesses said there was a huge rush at the bank and Lakshminarayana had to wait very long in the absence of a separate queue for senior citizens -- despite official directives to banks to ensure one.
     
    Elsewhere in India, as millions mobbed banks and ATMs, the mass struggle continued endlessly in the wake of the November 8 announcement of demonetisation of large currency notes.
     
    Men and women stood in serpentine queues for hours to exchange or deposit their spiked notes with new ones or withdraw cash to meet their daily expenses.
     
    Some of them were successful and many others lost patience when they couldn't get any money. There was no respite from the chaos at banks. The security personnel had a tough time controlling crowds.
     
    The government blamed the long queues outside banks on people trying to convert their black money into white by sending agents to exchange money again and again. 
     
     
    To prevent this, the government said banks would now use indelible ink -- as is done during elections to prevent bogus voting -- so that people were stopped from making multiple cash exchanges.
     
    Ankush Tiwari, a security guard with a private company, said he reached an ATM in Lajpat Nagar in south Delhi at 6 in the morning. A dozen people were already there.
     
    "There was no cash but we were told it will be refilled. We waited till noon when cash was reloaded. I got to withdraw Rs 2,500 (the maximum limit) around 1 p.m.," Tiwari told IANS.
     
    The story of chaos and suffering played out almost similarly in major cities, including Mumbai, Bengaluru, Chennai and Kolkata, and innumerable smaller towns and rural parts of India.
     
    In Hyderabad, many complained that bank officials were attending only to a few influential and major customers known to them.
     
    "I waited for over two hours but bank officials said they can't give me new notes as I don't have an account," said G. Narsaiah, a construction worker who had come to exchange Rs 2,000 in old notes.
     
     
    Long queues were seen outside all banks and ATMs in much of the country's most populous state of Uttar Pradesh.
     
    Sohail, a mechanic with an aluminium fitting shop in Lucknow, said he was having huge difficulties due to the demonetisation. "I am facing difficulty to even arrange meals for my family. Where do I go?"
     
    Belonging to a poor family, Sohail said he had not sent any money to his ageing parents in Firozabad, also in Uttar Pradesh, for days.
     
    In Kerala, the situation got more chaotic as district cooperative banks have been denied permission to exchange the spiked currencies. In protest, the entire cooperative sector will remain closed on Wednesday.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    International Sikh Conclave Ends As Patna Prepares For 'Prakash Parv' In January Next Year

    International Sikh Conclave Ends As Patna Prepares For 'Prakash Parv' In January Next Year
    It is a matter of great opportunity and challenge for the state government to organise the 350th birth anniversary of Guru Gobind Singh Maharaj as ‘Prakash Parv’ who was the 10th Guru of Sikhs

    International Sikh Conclave Ends As Patna Prepares For 'Prakash Parv' In January Next Year

    Nawaz Sharif's UN Speech A Monumental Error Of Judgement: Hardeep Singh Puri

    Nawaz Sharif's UN Speech A Monumental Error Of Judgement: Hardeep Singh Puri
    Absent good advice, democratically-elected leaders are capable of making serious mistakes which have far-reaching repercussions on the future of their country. 

    Nawaz Sharif's UN Speech A Monumental Error Of Judgement: Hardeep Singh Puri

    'Harassed' By Akali Leader, 4 Of Family Commit Suicide In Faridkot

    'Harassed' By Akali Leader, 4 Of Family Commit Suicide In Faridkot
    Jagtar Singh (48), a pickle-maker, his wife Salwinder Kaur (46) and two unmarried daughters Harbhajan Kaur and Parveen Kaur took the extreme step by jumping in Rajasthan Feeder canal in Faridkot, they said.

    'Harassed' By Akali Leader, 4 Of Family Commit Suicide In Faridkot

    Mumbai Police Assures Security To Pak Artistes As Raj Thackrey's Party Asks Them To Leave India

    Mumbai Police Assures Security To Pak Artistes As Raj Thackrey's Party Asks Them To Leave India
    The Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) on Friday gave a 48-hour ultimatum to all Pakistani cine and television artistes here to quit India or face consequences.

    Mumbai Police Assures Security To Pak Artistes As Raj Thackrey's Party Asks Them To Leave India

    Kashmir Tourism Has Lost Rs. 3,000 Crore During Unrest

    Kashmir Tourism Has Lost Rs. 3,000 Crore During Unrest
    Tourism sector in Kashmir has suffered a loss of around Rs. 3,000 crore as the 77-day ongoing unrest in the Valley resulted in sharp decline of tourists.

    Kashmir Tourism Has Lost Rs. 3,000 Crore During Unrest

    Patanjali To Foray Into Dairy Sector: Ramdev

    Yoga guru Ramdev on Friday said Patanjali will soon foray into dairy business, adding that the sector will cross the Rs 5 lakh crore mark by 2022.

    Patanjali To Foray Into Dairy Sector: Ramdev