Millennium Post

Venezuela Prez orders 100-unit banknotes out of circulatio­n

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CARACAS: Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro signed an emergency decree ordering the country's largest banknote, the 100 bolivar bill, taken out of circulatio­n to thwart "mafias" he accused of hoarding cash in Colombia.

The announceme­nt came yesterday as the government of Venezuela -- a country in the midst of an economic crisis and crippled with the world's highest inflation -- prepares to issue new banknotes and coins in values up to 200 times the highest denominati­on currently available.

The 100 bolivar bill is worth fewer than three cents of a dollar at current market rates. One bill can barely cover the cost of a piece of candy, while a stack of 50 notes is needed to buy a hamburger.

"In accordance with my constituti­onal powers and through this emergency economic decree, I have decided to take the 100 bolivar bill out of circulatio­n in the next 72 hours," the president said Sunday on his TV show "Contact with Maduro."

Maduro said the move was necessary after a Venezuelan investigat­ion found that billions of bolivars, in bills of 100, were stashed away by internatio­nal mafias, mainly in Colombian cities but also in Brazil.

He said the national banks were "accomplice­s in this plot," seeking to "destabiliz­e" the economy and led by an NGO "contracted by the US Department of Treasury." He did not elaborate.

Maduro ordered "all land, air and sea possibilit­ies closed immediatel­y so that they do not return those notes that were taken."

"You can stay outside with your scam," Maduro said, calling for the "maximum penalty" against the criminals.

Jose Guerra, a former director of Venezuela's central bank and now an opposition lawmaker, said on Twitter that to switch out 100 bolivar notes in such a short amount of time, the central bank "must have an equivalent amount in notes of greater denominati­ons," which he did not believe was possible.

Falling prices for Venezuela's crucial oil exports have caused a shortage of dollars in the country, driving up prices of imports of food, medicine and other crucial goods.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has forecast the inflation rate will hit 475 percent by the end of this year.

The center-right opposition blames Maduro's management for the crisis. Maduro, meanwhile, says the crisis is a Us-backed capitalist conspiracy.

 ??  ?? Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro said the move was necessary after a Venezuelan investigat­ion found that billions of bolivars, in bills of 100, were stashed away by internatio­nal mafias, mainly in Colombian cities but also in Brazil
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro said the move was necessary after a Venezuelan investigat­ion found that billions of bolivars, in bills of 100, were stashed away by internatio­nal mafias, mainly in Colombian cities but also in Brazil

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