11.1 C
London
Sunday, April 21, 2024
HomeNewsLabour MP voices NRIs’ concerns after note ban

Labour MP voices NRIs’ concerns after note ban

Date:

Related stories

Bradford murder: Police contact with victim being probed

A POLICE watchdog is examining whether the two forces...

EU’s youth mobility scheme offer rejected

The UK has rejected an EU offer that would...

Former Post Office chair defends derogatory language allegations

THE former chairman of the Post Office has defended...

Akshata Murty to get multimillion pound Infosys payout

PRIME Minister’s wife is due for a multimillion-pound payment...

Former civil servant accuses Cabinet Office of ‘systemic racism’

A former civil servant alleged that the head of...

 

 

 


 

Virendra Sharma, one of Britain's senior-most Indian-origin MPs, has called on the Indian government to end the uncertainty surrounding demonetisation of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes for NRIs and PIOs.

The 69-year-old Labour Party MP has received several calls and letters on the issue from his constituents in the heavily Indian-origin area of Ealing Southall in south-west London.

‘Still a month after the announcement of the demonetisation of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes, millions of NRIs are living with uncertainty. The stress and strain of not knowing whether families will lose money,’ Sharma said.

‘Thousands of families have a small amount of currency at home, to save exchanging money at the airport. These are the people that are accidentally being punished. Having a few thousands rupees does not make you a money launderer, and still they are suffering,’ he added.

The India-born MP wants the Indian Government to authorise Indian banks with operations in the UK to open accounts for deposits of Indian Rupees.

‘This money should then be held and made available for withdrawal only in India. This would protect the economy, but still offer freedom to many thousands of Indian citizens and NRIs not based in India,’ he said.

The demonetisation move has rattled many British-Indians, who make up 2.5 per cent of the population of England and Wales according to a 2011 UK government census.

Britain's longest-serving Indian-origin lawmaker Keith Vaz has already appealed to the Narendra Modi government to extend the deadline for foreign nationals by at least six months.

He has also written to Bank of England Governor Mark Carney requesting him to allow British Indians to exchange their banknotes in the UK.

 

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

4 × five =