The brother, 16 and sister, 12, finding no avenues to change these notes, have now turned to Prime Minister Narendra Modi and sought his intervention as the deadline to exchange the banned Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 bank notes has passed.
The cash was found in a box earlier this month during a police survey at one of their locked paternal houses in Sarawada village.
“After the RBI (Reserve Bank of India) denied the exchange of the old banknotes, the children, today (Sunday), wrote to the PM requesting him to arrange for the exchange. The Rs 96,500 was their mother's life-long saving,” Child Welfare Committee, Kota, chairman Harish Gurubaxani said.
The brother wants to invest the amount as fixed deposit in his sister's name, he said.
“The hand-written letter has been dispatched to the Prime Minister’s Office,” Gurubaxani said.
He said that their mother, Pooja Banjara, who was a daily wager, was allegedly murdered in 2013 and their father, Raju Banjara, died earlier.
“After their mother’s death, the children were staying at a shelter home. During a counselling session, they said that they had houses in R K Puram area and Sarawada village,” he said.
“Earlier this month, the police conducted a survey at the locked house in Sarawada on the directions of the CWC. The Rs 96,500, in denominations of old Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes, was found in a box along with the some jewellery,” he said.
Gurubaxani said, “The CWC had written to the RBI on March 17 to facilitate exchange of the notes. However, the RBI, through an e-mail on March 22, informed the CWC about its inability to exchange the old currency notes.”
He said that the amount is in 171 notes of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000. The Union government on November 8 last year had demonetised high-value Rs 1,000 and Rs 500 notes, and asked citizens to get them exchanged at the RBI by March 31, 2017.
Representative image.