It has been asked by the government to keep its stocks ready so that the indelible ink can be used by banks to mark customers exchanging defunct currency notes to check suspicious deposits.
"We have been intimated to keep the stock (of ink bottles) ready," Mysore Ink Manager (General and Corporate Affairs) C Harakumar told PTI over phone.
He, however, said the number of bottles government will need has not been intimated.
Grappling with unending queues and frayed tempers in banks and to check operation of syndicates, government today decided to introduce a system of marking customers exchanging defunct currency notes with indelible ink.
In 1962, the Election Commission, in collaboration with Law Ministry, National Physical Laboratory and National Research Development Corporation, made an agreement with Mysore Paints for supply of indelible ink for Lok Sabha and Assembly elections. Since then, it has been supplying the ink for elections in India.
A bottle of indelible ink contains 10 cubic centimetres (cc). As per modern measurement methods, one cubic centimetre is equivalent to one millilitre.
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