Nearly 5.5 mln somoni of dilapidated banknotes immobilized in Kulob in 2008

KULOB, January 22, 2009, Asia-Plus  — 5.478 million somoni of dilapidated banknotes was immobilized in Khatlon’s Kulob region in 2008, head of the branch of the National Bank of Tajikistan (NBT) in Kulob, Abdukarim Nematov, said in an interview with Asia-Plus. According to him, the NNBT’s branch replaced 1.715 million somoni of dilapidated banknotes with […]

Turko Dikayev

KULOB, January 22, 2009, Asia-Plus  — 5.478 million somoni of dilapidated banknotes was immobilized in Khatlon’s Kulob region in 2008, head of the branch of the National Bank of Tajikistan (NBT) in Kulob, Abdukarim Nematov, said in an interview with Asia-Plus.

According to him, the NNBT’s branch replaced 1.715 million somoni of dilapidated banknotes with the new ones, 1.677 million somoni of dilapidated banknotes were replaced through Agroinvestbon’s branch, and 1.148 million somoni of dilapidated banknotes were replaced through the branch of Amonatbonk (Tajikistan’s savings bank).

According to him, replacement of dilapidated banknotes with the new ones does not affect the somoni exchange rate because “since introduction of Tajik currency in October 30, 2000, only one third of the total volume of issued money is in circulation now.”   

Join us on social media!

Article translations:

Related Article

Оби зулол
Оби зулол

Most Read

Recent Articles

Two underage citizens of Tajikistan left without guardianship in Russia have been returned to their homeland

The reasons why Tajik children were left without guardians in the Russian Federation are not reported.

EFSD: Tajikistan attracts a record $4.9 billion for development projects

Funds were allocated for infrastructure development, implementation of reforms, and support for sustainable economic growth.

The first legal cryptocurrency exchange launched in Tajikistan

The exchange operates under the license of the IT Park of Tajikistan.

Where in Central Asia is meat the most expensive and the cheapest?

The average cost in Tajikistan is about $10-11 per kilogram.

The Russian government bans the import of foreign satellite terminals into the country. Starlink is included in the ban.

Russia has launched satellites of the "Rassvet" system, which is considered an analogue to Starlink.