Warning! Fraudulent banknotes circulating in the city

Provincial Police Spokesperson, Lt Col Moatshe Ngoepe, urged residents to acquaint themselves with the various security features used to identify bank notes and to be extra vigilant when accepting payment.

POLOKWANE – He also urged residents to report people dealing in fraud of any nature to the police.

This warning comes after several businesses and banks in the city reported counterfeit R100 and R200 have been used at their institutions.

The owner of a spaza shop in Flora Park, Betty Malan, said her shop had received several of the counterfeit notes. “I only realised the money was counterfeit when I went to bank some of the money and the teller informed me that some of the notes were counterfeit,” she explained. Malan was informed by bank personnel that the magnetic strip on the notes she tried to bank did not change colour in the light and that the watermark­ was different to that on an authentic note. A local chain store manager, Michael Delport, told BONUS he was informed by bank personnel that some of the money he was banking was fraudulent.

Security features on South African money include:

What to do when you receive a banknote, according to the South African Reserve Bank:

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