Fake Indian Currency Note
Fake Indian Currency Note
Fake Currency
Counterfeit money is imitation currency produced without the
legal sanction of the state or government. Producing or using counterfeit
money is a form of fraud or forgery. Counterfeiting is almost as old as
money itself.
On 8 November 2016, Narendra Modi announced that the hitherto existing 500 and 1000 rupee notes cease to be legal tender. He said that the move is taken to curb black money and widespread counterfeit currency in the country. He introduced new ₹500 and ₹2000 notes, and discontinued the hitherto existing ₹1000 note.
Legal Aspect
According to Indian law, possessing fake notes is a punishable offence, but only if the person in question is aware that the notes are fake.The Indian government intends to classify offences involving high-value FICN as terror acts, with an amendment to the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act.
Terrorism
Fake Indian notes are
mainly used in terror related activities. The money mainly flows from Nepal, Pakistan and Bangladesh. The terrorists are
using it to cripple the Indian economy and to create economic terror.
Printing Method of Fake Currency
Although fake currency is being
printed with precision, the Crime Investigation Department (CID) says that they can
be detected with some effort. Currency printed by local racketeers and foreign
racketeers in Pakistan on the behest of its intelligence service Inter-Services
Intelligence (ISI) can be detected
easily as they use the photographic method, ‘hand engraved blocks,
lithographic processes and computer
colour scanning’.
In ‘counterfeit notes, the watermark’
is made by using opaque ink, painting with ‘white solution, stamping’ with a
dye engraved with the ‘picture of Mahatma Gandhi’. Then ‘oil, grease or wax’ is
applied to give the picture a translucent feel.
In genuine notes, the security
thread is incorporated into the paper at the time of manufacture. But in fake
notes, the security thread is imitated by drawing a line with a pencil, by
printing a line with ‘grey ink, or by using aluminium thread while pasting two
thin sheets’ of paper. Forgers find it difficult to reproduce the same shape of
individual numbers again and again with accuracy. The alignment of figures is
also difficult to maintain.
Spreading of ‘ink, smaller or bigger
number, inadequate gaps, and different alignments’ in numbers should be
regarded with suspicion. In counterfeit notes, the printed lines will be broken
and there may also be ‘ink smudges’. In recent times it has been reported that FICN match 10 out of 14
security parameters adopted by the Indian government, with suggestions that the highest quality fakes could
have only been produced by a nation state.
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