Dinar Recaps - Our Blog: HOW DID KUWAIT RV BACK THEN? - Post By Just Da Truth OOM Forum

Dinar Recaps - Our Blog
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HOW DID KUWAIT RV BACK THEN? - Post By Just Da Truth OOM Forum
Jan 6th 2012, 14:39

_I HAVE ALWAYS WONDERED HOW KUWAIT R.V.D, SO HERE IS A NEWS POST FROM MARCH 25,1991 ON HOW THEY DID IT !!!!  Just Da Truth - (OOM Member & Poster)
(With no Electricity, No money transfer, and no phones !!!!)  
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This is the same process basically as what happened in 2003 when the New IQD was introduced. The global rate of the kwd didnt change back then, only the street value.... NOT an rv.... What we are dealing with regards to Iraq is completely different, its not a good idea to try and compare iraq to kuwait in ANY aspect.... JMHO  therealbutterfly  (OOM Member & Poster)
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I saw this article a few days ago and find it very interesting as well. It certainly shows an RV is possible without a lot of fanfare or even basic infrastructure. I will caution you that the primary difference is there was a disruption of banking and currency operations for just a few months until our brave coalition liberated Kuwait. I think the cultural aspects surrounding the Iraqi RV and the relative lack of sophistication amongst the citizenry add unique challenges.
landcareunlimited  (OOM Member & Poster)
   
No Electricity but Kuwait Reopens Its Banks

By DONATELLA LORCH, Special to The New York Times
Published: March 25, 1991
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Read More Link on Right
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It still has no water and little electricity or food, but Kuwait revived its banking system today, introducing a new currency.

Banks reopened for the first time since Iraqi occupation forces shut them down in December. Thousands of people lined up to exchange their old Kuwaiti dinars for crisp new ones and to withdraw a limited amount of money.

Without electricity, the banks services were slow, limited to money exchange and withdrawal. There was no telex, no electronic money transfer and no telephones. The computers were unusable, so all transactions had to be entered by hand.

"It's like going back 20 years," said Mohammed al-Yahya, the manager of the Commercial Bank of Kuwait, the nation's second-largest bank. Seized Dinars Canceled

The Central Bank is canceling the value of Kuwaiti dinars that were seized from the Central Bank and put into circulation by the Iraqis. The invalid serial numbers were posted today in front of all banks in the city.

All other old dinars can be exchanged for new ones on a one-to-one rate until May 7, when the old dinars become invalid. The new official exchange rate is 3.47 American dollars for one new Kuwaiti dinar.

Although it is severly handicapped without electricity, the Commercial Bank, like many other major banks, was able to open for business because its records had been saved from the Iraqis. Mr. Yahya hid the bank's balance sheets in his home and sent its computer records to London via Syria with an Indian employee, who packed the tapes into the back of a trailer.

The banks also face serious personnel shortages. Only 11 of the Commercial Bank's 35 branches opened today, with 137 out of 1,300 workers.

Before the Iraqi invasion, only 17 percent of the bank's staff was Kuwaiti. Many of the foreign workers -- Jordanians, Palestinians and Indians -- fled and now cannot re-enter the country.

For those exchanging money today, there was little they could buy in Kuwait. Many of those in line said they planned to use their money for vacations or for shopping trips to Saudi Arabia to buy generators and food.

"I need to get away from this pressure," said Abdul Mohammed Hussein, a computer engineer in his early 40's who said he was withdrawing 1,500 new dinars to take a vacation in the United Arab Emirates. "Everywhere you go you find lines. At the supermarket, you find lines. To get petrol for the car, you find lines."

Abdul Hamed al-Atar, a 50-year-old retired Interior Ministry official, said this was the first time he had set foot in a bank since September, and he seemed relieved. "Kuwaits always keep a lot of cash with them," he said as he was handed crisp new piles of money that he stuffed into a small bag. "It's a comfort to have money in my hands."


http://www.nytimes.c...-its-banks.html

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