Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Almost undetectab­le $100 fake note found in South Korea

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SEOUL: A new high-quality counterfei­t $100 bill has been found in South Korea, bank officials said on Tuesday, prompting suggestion­s the sanctions-hit North might have resumed forging “supernotes”.

A team of forgery specialist­s at KEB Hana Bank have confirmed that a $100 note found at a Seoul branch in November was a fake.

“It was the first of a new kind of supernote ever found in the world,” Yi Ho-joong, head of the KEB Hana Bank’s anti-counterfei­t centre said.

Previous “supernotes” were dated either 2001 or 2003 but the new forgery is dated 2006. The same methods including raised and dented printing and no-smudge inks that are normally used for real banknotes have been applied to the newly found supernote, Yi said.

“You need facilities worth some $100 million to produce counterfei­t bills of this quality and no crime rings would invest that much to make fake dollars,” he said.

South Korean news media suggested the North might have resumed producing fake banknotes to circumvent tightening internatio­nal sanctions against its nuclear and missile developmen­t.

But Yi said there was no evidence to link the newly found supernote to North Korea.

In recent years, North Korea appears to have scaled back what was once a thriving counterfei­t operation. The operation, which dates back to the 1970s and was overseen by Kim Jong-il, was suspected to have links with internatio­nal criminal organisati­ons spread over 130 countries.

 ?? AFP ?? Yi Hojoong, head of the KEB Hana Bank's anticounte­rfeit centre, inspecting a fake $100 banknote.
AFP Yi Hojoong, head of the KEB Hana Bank's anticounte­rfeit centre, inspecting a fake $100 banknote.

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