Nischal Shetty, the CEO of Indian crypto exchange WazirX, has reached out to a top lawmaker to look into the regulation of Bitcoin and similar digital assets.

The blockchain entrepreneur requested India’s finance minister Arun Jaitley to focus more on crypto’s potential benefits than its minimalistic misuses. Saying that every industry is prone to have its own set of problems, Shetty believed they should not become the reason to hamper innovation that could benefit the nation’s growth.

Dear @arunjaitley If fear of misuse ruled us then we would never have: 1. Electricity for fear of electrocution

2. Cars for fear of accidents

3. Cash for fear of black money Yet we still have these because benefits outweigh the problems Crypto is the same. Regulate & win ?? — Nischal (WazirX) ⚡️ (@NischalShetty) November 18, 2018

The status of Bitcoin and similar cryptocurrencies continue to be under wraps in India. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) this year imposed a banking ban on all the local cryptocurrency companies, disallowing them access to fiat liquidity. The decision led to a blockchain exodus, with startups and even an established crypto exchange shutting their operations and moving to crypto-friendly regions.

The government, meanwhile, maintained its negative stance against cryptocurrencies. Jaitley renounced its use in a parliament session this year, causing a massive market sell-off in the BTC-INR market.

But India yet remains to be a country with no cryptocurrency law. The ban is only psychological and does not merit any constitutional verse. Bitcoin continues to be an entity without a legal definition.

Amidst the blanket ban, a group of Indian crypto companies led by Kali Digital Ecosystem, which runs the exchange CoinRecoil filed a writ in the Supreme Court of India against the RBI’s decision. The case is still pending owing to the central bank’s delay in filing an official response.

At the same time, there are rumors that the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) will be regulating Bitcoin as a commodity. But, official confirmation has not been made yet.

Related Reading: India Update: RBI Claims Court Can’t Recognize Crypto as Currency Due to Existing Laws

Public Movement Against Crypto Ban

Shetty sought community support in his later tweets, asking people to tag Jaitley every day and demand cryptocurrency regulation.

“We need to tweet to our minister every day till we get a reply,” he wrote. “The more we tweet, the more chances of our voice being heard & crypto getting a positive regulation in India.”

The movement has reached its 18th day, but no response from the finance minister has come yet.

Earlier, the Indian crypto community voted in favor of crypto regulation, casting more than 8,000 votes via Change.org to revoke the RBI ban on crypto banking. But the appeal fell on deaf ears.

As the blanket ban continues, the local Indian cryptocurrency community self-admittedly has moved to an underground exchange market. Similar to China, the crypto trading operations have gone peer-to-peer, making the government enforce RBI’s decision in full potential.

“Even if the government decides to ban the possession, it will be just impossible to implement it,” Shetty remarked.

Featured image from Shutterstock.