Pakistan

Eid-ul-Fitr 2018: List of E-branches for fresh currency note issuance through SMS serviceThe State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) will issue fresh currency notes to general public from June 1 to exchange with old ones for Eid-ul-Fitr celebrations.The central bank in collaboration with the Pakistan Banks Association (PBA) set up SMS short code 8877 for issuing fresh currency notes, which will be issued during June 1 to 14.
According to a notification issued earlier this month, a person intending to get new currency notes would send message to 8877 along with his CNIC number and branch code of the selected bank.
The system will respond with sending transaction number and branch address.Charges of sending an SMS to 8877 are Rs15 (plus tax).
Under the SMS service, each CNIC number and mobile phone number can only be used once.No transaction code will be issued to senders if they send same CNIC / smart card number from different mobile numbers or addresses, it said.A help desk has also been established at (021)- 111-008-877 to entertain queries / complaints of general public.The subscriber would have to present his original CNIC at the time of receiving fresh currency notes.
The notification also said each subscriber can exchange and get three packets of Rs10, and one each package of Rs50 and Rs100.
This facility will be available at 1,535 commercial bank branches and the SBP offices located in 132 cities, it added.Here is the list of e-branches





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting - It's Voluntary!


ADVERTISE


Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


[Pakistan] - United States pushes India and Pakistan to collaborate to de-escalate stress


Pakistan destroys Indian bunkers, checkpost in response to unprovoked LoC violation


Pakistan debunks Indian 'propaganda', warns world of threat to regional instability


India to carry out military action against Pakistan soon, warns minister


NIRC, ILO join hands for Labour Day 2025 conference


[Pakistan] - Pakistan most likely to hit historical high of 50 ° C: report