The International Year of Disabled Persons in 1981 prompted a wave of commemorative issues from governments eager to demonstrate participation in UN initiatives, and South Yemen was no exception. Piedfort strikes — double-thickness blanks — were a fashionable presentation format among European mints at the time, and the Aden issue followed suit, likely produced at a contracted European facility rather than domestically.
The PDRY's coinage output was always limited; the state had virtually no numismatic infrastructure of its own.
The International Year of Disabled Persons in 1981 prompted a wave of commemorative issues from governments eager to demonstrate participation in UN initiatives, and South Yemen was no exception. Piedfort strikes — double-thickness blanks — were a fashionable presentation format among European mints at the time, and the Aden issue followed suit, likely produced at a contracted European facility rather than domestically.
The PDRY's coinage output was always limited; the state had virtually no numismatic infrastructure of its own.