Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

NRIs Seeks More Time To Exchange Old Notes

Darpan News Desk IANS, 09 Jan, 2017 11:43 AM
    The Diaspora comprising Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) and Persons of Indian Origin (PIOs) has sought extension of the deadline to exchange or deposit the banned notes till December 31.
     
    "The deadline should be extended by six months till December 31 as all those having the banned notes will not come to India just to exchange or deposit them by June," Thomas Abraham, a NRI from Dubai, told IANS here.
     
    The government had on December 31 extended the deadline to June 30 for the diaspora to deposit or exchange the specified bank notes (old Rs 500 and Rs 1,000) after the November 8 demonetisation.
     
    Resident Indians travelling or living abroad temporarily have been given three months (up to March 31) to declare the banned notes they are carrying at airports on arrival before submitting them in designated Reserve Bank of India (RBI) offices across the country.
     
    "Though many of us may not hold huge amounts of the banned notes as we transact in local currency and the Indian rupee is not fully convertible, we should be given enough time to exchange them since most of us come to India once or twice in a year," Abraham said on the margins of the 14th Pravasi Bharatiya Divas.
     
    Another NRI from Oman said the government should allow the diaspora to deposit the banned notes at Indian embassies or high commissions and credit them in their bank accounts in case the deadline is not extendable after June 30.
     
    "The RBI or overseas branches of state-run banks like SBI (State Bank of India) should be advised to open counters at our embassies in all countries for depositing the banned notes whatever be their number as they are our hard-earned cash," said Gopalankutty Karnavar, a Muscat-based NRI from Kerala.
     
     
    Several overseas Indian delegates attending the three-day biennial jamboree said they normally keep or carry Rs 25,000-50,000 in cash when coming to India for contingencies despite having bank accounts and using debit/credit for payments or transactions.
     
    "We bring a few thousands of rupees with us whenever we fly to India for initial expenses at airports or food, local travel and purchases before converting dollars or other currencies," said Kanavar, a blue collar worker from Alappuzha in Kerala who heads the Malayli wing of the Indian social club in the Gulf country.
     
    The Global Organisation of People of Indian Origin also urged the government to extend the deadline to December 30, 2017, for exchanging or depositing the high denomination notes in RBI or SBI.
     
    Terming the note ban a welcome move, a majority of the diaspora said its implementation was, however, poor as their kith and kin were at the receiving end of the cash-crunch and the economic disruption.
     
    "If the high value notes were banned to fight black money, terror funding, fake currency and corruption, the move is laudable though it exposes the government's failure to curb the menace through its enforcing agencies," a US-based NRI told IANS on the condition of anonymity.
     
    Although Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday thanked the diaspora for supporting the note ban, many NRIs and IPOs said unlike their resident Indians they were not impacted by it as they don't transact in rupee, which is not fully convertible.
     
     
    "The sudden ban has taken us by surprise though not affected by it as the rupee is not used in our country and the value of our remittances is intact in our bank accounts," said James Mathew, an accountant in a private firm at Manama in Bahrain.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Watch: This Dancing Young Balloon-Seller In Delhi's Connaught Place Is A Star

    Watch: This Dancing Young Balloon-Seller In Delhi's Connaught Place Is A Star
    Someone Get Him A Proper Trainer Already!

    Watch: This Dancing Young Balloon-Seller In Delhi's Connaught Place Is A Star

    Winnipeg Daycare Home Closed After Toddler's Hands Injured; In Hospital 2 Weeks

    Winnipeg Daycare Home Closed After Toddler's Hands Injured; In Hospital 2 Weeks
    Chris and Julie Phippard brought their 13-month-old daughter to the unlicensed home daycare in St. Vital on Oct. 13.

    Winnipeg Daycare Home Closed After Toddler's Hands Injured; In Hospital 2 Weeks

    This Nepal Storyteller Uses Photos And Few Lines To Reveal Lives

    This Nepal Storyteller Uses Photos And Few Lines To Reveal Lives
    It started with a photograph of a smirking, young man wearing a heavy-metal band T-shirt and selling tea on the streets of Kathmandu. It has become a wildly popular blog chronicling street life in the Himalayan nation of Nepal.

    This Nepal Storyteller Uses Photos And Few Lines To Reveal Lives

    Mum's The Word: MS Dhoni Wears 'Devaki' On Jersey, Team Follows 'Nayi Soch'

    Mum's The Word: MS Dhoni Wears 'Devaki' On Jersey, Team Follows 'Nayi Soch'

    India cricketers wore jerseys bearing their mother's names instead of their own in the fifth ...

    Mum's The Word: MS Dhoni Wears 'Devaki' On Jersey, Team Follows 'Nayi Soch'

    Montreal Woman Who Falsely Claimed Rape Gets 15 Months In The Community

    Montreal Woman Who Falsely Claimed Rape Gets 15 Months In The Community
      Carole Thomas will be under house arrest for the first eight months but will be allowed to go to work and attend medical appointments.

    Montreal Woman Who Falsely Claimed Rape Gets 15 Months In The Community

    Rising Star: YouTube Playing Key Role In Google's Success

    Rising Star: YouTube Playing Key Role In Google's Success
     YouTube has emerged as a break-out star in Google's cast of services as the online video site upstages cable television for a younger generation of viewers looking for amusement, news and music on their smartphones.

    Rising Star: YouTube Playing Key Role In Google's Success