The National - News

Currency exchanges fresh out of rupees

Expats going home for holiday forced to go without cash

- The National staff

DUBAI // Indian expatriate­s going home for holidays say currency exchanges have run out of rupees.

Indian prime minister Narendra Modi’s government scrapped 500 and 1,000-rupee notes to tackle corruption and tax evasion last month, and many UAE exchanges have run out of the currency.

Prem Kumar said he could not find any rupees when he recently returned home for a holiday.

“My family has asked me to get some cash as they have no money at home,” Mr Kumar said. “My family lives in a village in remote part of India, where there is no bank.

“Now with the sudden new law they have to travel a long way to exchange money, but were not able to do so because of long queues and lack of cash at the only bank catering to thousands of inhabitant­s of the area.

“As of now, my family is cashless back home and I cannot exchange money here in Dubai. It’s a frustratin­g situation.”

Ahmed Ali, a cook for a family in Dubai, said the announceme­nt wiped out his savings. “All my hard- earned money has vanished with just one announceme­nt,” Mr Ali said. “I saved this for my son’s education. All gone. “I am in Dubai now and cannot go to India to stand in long queues to get it exchanged. I don’t know what to do.”

A customer-service representa­tive at the UAE Exchange in Al Barsha said that the Indian reserve bank had stopped exporting currency on November 9.

“We have no Indian currency available at any counter,” he said. “We have no other options other than to send thousands of customers away disappoint­ed.”

He said cash would be available only after the reserve bank issued the approval notice to export currency.

“Until then, there is no Indian currency.”

Abdul Jaleel K V, assistant general manager at Al Ansari Exchange, said the amount of Indian currency was slowly improving.

“Initially, we experience­d a shortage in the availabili­ty of the newly minted Indian rupees,” Mr Abdul Jaleel said. “However, we are pleased to confirm that the new Indian rupee notes are now available and the situation is steadily going back to normal.” Lulu Exchange in Bur Dubai has only the new 2,000-rupee notes available.

“We have only 2,000 rupees as of now and that we got in exchange from a tourist,” said a staff member. He said the company was not getting any currency from India.

Promoth Manghat, chief executive of the UAE Exchange Group, advised customers travelling to India to use bank cards for transactio­ns.

Using cards for transactio­ns in India would help customers “avoid the inconvenie­nce caused by the scarcity of cash in the Indian market”, he said.

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