India’s finance minister, Nirmala Sitharaman, has revealed 
that the previous version of the cryptocurrency bill the government is 
pushing needed to be reworked. “This bill, once the Cabinet clears, will
 come into the House,” the finance minister told Rajya Sabha, the upper 
house of India’s parliament.
Indian Government Pushing New Crypto Bill
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman answered some questions in Rajya 
Sabha Tuesday regarding the government’s cryptocurrency plans and the 
crypto bill that has been listed to be taken up in the current session of parliament.
“The Cryptocurrency and Regulation of Official Digital Currency Bill 
2021” seeks “to prohibit all private cryptocurrencies in India, however,
 it allows for certain exceptions to promote the underlying technology 
of cryptocurrency and its uses,” according to the legislative agenda for
 the winter session of Lok Sabha, the lower house of India’s parliament.
Responding to questions regarding the crypto bill, Finance Minister 
Sitharaman explained that “There were other dimensions and the old bill 
had to be reworked and now we are trying to work on a new bill.” She 
emphasized:
This bill, once the Cabinet clears, will come into the House.
An older version of the cryptocurrency bill was listed to be introduced in an earlier session of parliament but it was not taken up.
Noting that the previous version of the bill was a “genuine attempt,” Sitharaman described:
The earlier attempt was definitely to come up with a bill
that the House can consider. But, later, because rapidly a lot of
things had to come into play, we had started working on a new bill. This
is the bill that is now being proposed.
The current version of the crypto bill has not been made public. So 
far, the Indian government has published only one crypto bill — the one 
drafted by an interministerial committee (IMC) headed by former Finance 
Secretary Subhash Chandra Garg. Published
 in July 2019, the Garg committee’s bill proposes creating a regulatory 
framework for central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) to be issued by 
the central bank, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), but a ban for all 
other cryptocurrencies.
The finance minister also answered some questions about false and 
misleading crypto advertisements. She stated that there is no decision 
to stop digital currency advertisements.
On Monday, the finance minister answered
 three sets of questions in Lok Sabha regarding bitcoin transactions, 
the high-profile bitcoin scam in Karnataka, and the legality of 
cryptocurrency trading and crypto exchanges in India. She noted that the
 government does not collect data on bitcoin transactions or 
cryptocurrency trading. In addition, she said there is no proposal to 
recognize bitcoin as a currency.
source link :  https://news.bitcoin.com/indian-finance-minister-crypto-bill-reworked-submitting-to-cabinet/