the scene with unidentified persons.
“The currency notes were so accurate that he could not even think that they could be counterfeit,” Ammar said and added the cashier of a bakery indicated that the note was fake when he gave him a Rs1,000 bill after buying confectioneries.
SP CIA Captain (r) Ilyas, confirming the occurrence when contacted by this correspondent, said that the gang members have been identified and teams have been sent to hunt them down. He said that the gangsters are very smart but left many clues enough to make headway to them. The girl was traced by the CIA through her mobile phone number which she used for contacting Ammar. The accused girl with two young men Suleman alias Mani and Malik Umair have been arrested.
The CIA sources told ‘The News’ that during nvestigation, the girl disclosed that other young girls are also part of the gang. She disclosed that Malik Umair was the chief of the gang and used to pay Rs6,000 to every member after every hit.
Sources said that most gang members were students and studying in different colleges and private universities of the town.
Malik Umair revealed during investigation that he used to fetch counterfeit currency notes from a fake currency notes dealer based in Peshawar, but he expressed his unawareness about the dealer’s links with international dealers. He said that he had fetched millions of fake currency notes from Peshawar. He disclosed that he sold all mobile phone sets at a shop in Singapore Plaza, Saddar, Rawalpindi.
The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) makes every effort against counterfeiting and limiting its impact on Pakistani banknotes and maintaining public confidence in Pakistani banknotes, the SBP sources said when contacted.
Sources said that the new series of the currency notes have a number of security features which are easy to check but difficult to copy or counterfeit.
According to the SBP sources, in counterfeit notes the watermark is made by using thick ink, painting with white solution, stamping a die or by applying oil. Grease or wax is used to give the transparent image of portrait of Quaid-i-Azam, sources said.
Sources said that security thread is embedded in the banknote paper. The counterfeit notes are imitated by drawing a line by pencil or printing a line with gray ink or by using a plastic thread or by pasting two thin sheets of paper, sources said and added that the thread appears a continuous dark line in Rs10, Rs50 and Rs100 old design notes. The word 'State Bank of Pakistan' may be checked in the thread of Rs500 and Rs1,000 notes.
The words 'State Bank of Pakistan' along with 'denomination numeral' may be checked in the new design banknotes of Rs10 and Rs20, whereas this appears as silver dashes in Rs5,000 banknotes. The denomination '5000' may be checked and on viewing through ultraviolet light, yellow and blue fluorescent bands may be viewed, sources concluded.