Deccan Chronicle

War on counterfei­ting part of anti-terror ops

The increasing pattern of terrorists slipping in across the border, as seen in the daily reports of encounters in the Kashmir Valley, shows how the war against terror can never end

-

The reports of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligen­ce having copied many of the safety features of the new `2,000 notes and making passable fakes, albeit on poor paper, and sending them through the porous Bangladesh border should be a wake-up call: the war on counterfei­t currency can never end. One of the three main objectives of demonetisa­tion, announced on November 8 last year, was to root out counterfei­t currency circulatin­g in the country. The speed with which India’s enemies operated — new `2,000 notes reportedly crossed the LoC hours after being issued by banks — show how alert state agencies must be to counter Pakistani moves to source the same security paper and make better fakes than they churn out now. News of ISI mints near Karachi printing fake Indian currency can’t be discounted. This isn’t just the intelligen­ce agencies’ figment of imaginatio­n — such nefarious operations are just what ISI’s dirty tricks unit can be expected to do. To debase an enemy’s currency is actually more devastatin­g than any terror strike, and such insidious operations are par for the course for Pakistan. But there is no use railing against an enemy, saying we can expose them to the world by protesting to the UN. It is more important to protect our own interests by making our currency’s safety features harder to replicate.

Closer home, the fear that demonetisa­tion may have to be rated as an even greater failure after the surfacing in such short time of our new currency notes of `2,000 and `500 is now real. The stated objective of the drive was to drive out black money. More than 100 days have gone by and the government has not made public the quantum of money that has come into the banks. If outing black money as well as counterfei­t currency were two great objectives of demonetisa­tion, the other was to stem the flow of terror funding.

The increasing pattern of terrorists slipping in across the border, as seen in the daily reports of encounters in the Kashmir Valley, shows how the war against terror can never end. India has lost 26 soldiers just this year while killing 22 extremists. It was not as if demonetisa­tion was going to stem terrorism; it would probably just slow it down, as we are seeing now. The price we pay for our freedom is eternal vigilance, and protecting our currency is as important as continuing to gather intelligen­ce and stopping terrorists from carrying out their attacks.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India