Tag: Godwin Emefiele

  • CBN Governor, Emefiele apologizes to Nigerians expecting extension of Jan 31 deadline

    CBN Governor, Emefiele apologizes to Nigerians expecting extension of Jan 31 deadline

    Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Mr. Godwin Emefiele, has apologized to those anticipating
    an extension of the January 31 deadline for the Naira redesign policy.

    In his words: “I must say that unfortunately, I don’t have good news for those who feel we should shift the deadline, my apologies. The reason is that 90 days should be enough for those who have the old currency to deposit it to the banks.”

    Emefiele, who spoke on other issues, made the apology on Tuesday afternoon, at the end of the first 2023 Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting in Abuja.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that there had been doubts the apex bank might be unable to meet the January 31 target.

    This is more so as some Nigerians have expressed worries and disappointment over the scarcity of the new naira notes and the apex bank’s handling of the process.

    Recall that the CBN announced in October last year that it planned to redesign, produce, and circulate new series of N200, N500 and N1,000 notes. The three notes represent the highest denomination of Nigeria’s eight legal tenders.

    Following the launch of the new designs on November 23, 2022, by President Muhammadu Buhari, the new currency notes were circulated from December 15, 2022, with both the new and existing notes considered legal tender until January 31, 2023.

    CBN Governor, Emefiele apologizes to Nigerians expecting extension of Jan 31 deadline

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) correspondent who visited most banks in the Agbara area of Lagos State, today, observed that their ATM machines were still dispensing old notes to their customers. Also, over-the-counter customers were being given old notes.

    At the UBA Bank branch in the bank road of Agbara area of Lagos, who as at 3pm stopped customers from entering the bank, our correspondent upon using the ATM observed that old notes of N500 and N1000 denominations were being dispensed to customers. The same was observed in other banks at the location.

    Efforts made by our correspondent to speak with the bank’s (UBA) Branch Manager were thwarted by their security personnel, as gates were locked at 3 pm to avoid any entrance into the bank.

    Also, some of the PoS operators doing business within the Agbara area of Lagos said that they did not have new notes to give to their customers, adding that in a bail of N100,000 they got from the bank, only N1,000 new notes were issued to them.

    Amid the concerns about the scarcity of the new notes, CBN, today, reiterated its no turning back on January 31, 2023, deadline for old currencies to be phased out from circulation.

    CBN Governor, Emefiele apologizes to Nigerians expecting extension of Jan 31 deadline

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) gathered that the apex bank had issued a directive to the banks and ordered the implementation to begin immediately.

    However, barely seven days to CBN deadlin, many banks in the rural areas of Lagos State have not complied with the directive by the apex bank as they complained of inadequate supply of the new notes, prompting them to load their ATMs with the old notes.

    Although the CBN maintained that the current series of N200, N500 and N1,000 notes would remain legal tender until its January 31 deadline, it however, advised Nigerians to ensure they deposited all the old N200, N500 and N1,000 banknotes in their possession before the deadline.

  • BREAKING: Against projections, CBN raises interest rate to 17.5%

    BREAKING: Against projections, CBN raises interest rate to 17.5%

    Against projections by some experts, the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has increased the monetary policy rate by 100 basis points to 17.5 per cent.

    This is contained in a communiqué issued at the end of the first MPC meeting in 2023, in Abuja on Tuesday.

    CBN Governor, Mr Godwin Emefiele, who read the communiqué said that the previous increases had yielded results, with the slight drop in the inflation rate recorded in December 2022.

    The committee, however, held all other parameters constant.

    While the Assymetric Corridor of +100/-700 basis points around the MPR was retained, the Liquidity Ratio of 30 per cent and the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) of 32.5 per cent were also retained.

    The MPR had witnessed four consecutive increases, from 11.5 per cent in early 2022 to 16.5 in November 2022.

    According to Emefiele, the committee deliberated on whether to hike rates further or hold on to examine the impact of the past increases.

    “The options considered were primarily to hold the rate or tighten it further to consolidate the previous gains.

    “However, the MPC noted that loosening the rate would gravely undermine the gains of the last four increases, hence the hike in rate,” he said.

    Some financial experts had projected that the apex bank would most likely retain the previous rates.

    According Umhe Uwaleke, a Professor of Capital Market at the Nasarawa State University, Keffi, increasing the MPR can jeopardise economic growth.

    Uwaleke said that the MPC was likely to hold all the existing parameters for two reasons.

    “One, historical evidence suggests that the MPC seldom adjusts policy rates in January, due to the need to allow the markets to stabilise in the new year.

    “Secondly, inflationary pressure is beginning to reduce as seen in headline inflation numbers for December 2022, not only in Nigeria but also in the United States of America.

    “I do not advise a further hike in MPR, as doing so beyond the current high rate of 16.5 per cent is capable of jeopardising economic growth,” he said.

    An economist, Dr Tope Fasua, urged the CBN to shun temptation to further increase the rates.

    Fasua suggested that the rates should be retained and be guided by market trends, adding that constantly increasing interest rate could spur recession.

    ”I hope they hold the rate as it is and watch what happens. Already, inflation trended down 0.14 per cent; they may be tempted to further increase rates to accelerate the fall.

    “But, they need to now think about the fact that constant raising of interest rates could spur recession, as life becomes harder for manufacturers,” he said.

  • BREAKING: CBN Gov denies withholding N89 trillion from stamp duty

    BREAKING: CBN Gov denies withholding N89 trillion from stamp duty

    Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Mr Godwin Emefiele has denied the apex bank is withholding N89 trillion from the payment of stamp duty.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Mr Emefiele disclosed that total receipts from stamp duty payments in six years between 2016 and 2022 stand at N370,686 billion.

    Emefiele made the disclosure during a press briefing on Tuesday in Abuja, after the first meeting of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) in 2023.

    Recall that a House of Representatives member, Alhaji Muhammed Kazaure, representing Kazaure, Roni, Gwiwa, Yankwashi of Jigawa raised the alarm in 2022 of alleged theft of stamp duty proceeds running into N89 trillion.

    However, the CBN Governor emphasized that the apex bank was not withholding any N89 trillion.

    “Total assets of all banks is N71 trillion; total deposit in banks is N44 trillion. From 2016 till date, stamp duty collection has amounted to N370,686 billion.

    “The Federal Inland Revenue Service has disbursed N226.451 billion of the money to the Federation Account Allocation Committee, while the balance of N144,235 is in the CBN.

    “The highest collection of the stamp is N71 billion, collected by First Bank,” Emefiele said.

    He added that the CBN had appointed four world-class audit firms to go into the books of banks to verify if there was any unremitted stamp duty.

    “If there is any uncollected stamp duty, the banks will pay to the last kobo,” he assured.

  • BREAKING: Senate, Reps wade into Naira notes dilemma

    BREAKING: Senate, Reps wade into Naira notes dilemma

    The Senate has urged the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to extend the withdrawal date of the old naira notes from January 31 to July 31.

    The upper chamber also urged the CBN to open an exchange window where people that don’t have bank accounts to deposit their old notes to do so.

    The senate’s resolutions were sequel to a motion by Sen. Sadiq Suleiman (APC-Kwara) during Tuesday’s plenary.

    Moving the motion, Suleiman recalled that the Senate in it’s resolution on Dec. 28, 2022, urged the CBN to extend the use of the old notes from Jan. 31 to June 30.

    He said that however, the apex bank had insisted on terminating the use of the old naira notes by end of Jan.

    Suleiman lamented that there was no enough new naira notes in circulation and as such, moved that the date should be extended to July 31.

    He said: “Experiences around the world have shown that such abrupt decision if not controlled usually created chaos.

    “The Senate should extend the use of the old notes to July 31,” he said.

    Supporting the motion, Sen. Ibrahim Hadejia (APC-Jigawa) said that the call for extension was for their constituents and not for their (lawmakers) personal benefits.

    “In my constituency, no Automated Teller Machine (ATM) is dispensing the new notes.”.

    Similarly, Sen. Adamu Aliero (PDP-Kebbi) said that the the policy would inflict untold hardship on people living in the rural areas.

    “The CBN governor should be invited,” he said.

    Sen. Adamu Bulkachuwa (PDP-Bauchi) said that the extension was necessary otherwise there would be chaos.

    Sen. Biodun Olujimi (PDP-Ekiti) who decried that in her local government area, about 90 per cent of the people have not seen a glimpse of the new naira notes, called on the apex bank to “look away from the elections”.

    She said that if the date was not extended, it would lead to collateral damage which would not augur well for the economy.

    Sen. Mohammed Ndume (APC-Borno) called on the Senate to use its oversight responsibility on the CBN to “order the the CBN governor to extend the date”.

    He said that the power of the senate should not be played down calling on the senators to stand firm on the call for extension.

    For Sen. Sam Egwu (PDP-Ebonyi) who was the only senator who opposed the motion, “Nigerians do not have the culture of keeping their money in the bank.

    “It is in Nigeria where cash is used arbitrarily; other countries use electronic means.

    “Nigerians are just averse to change,” Egwu said.

    In his remarks, Senate President, Ahmad Lawan, said that most of the senatorial districts did not have banks.

    He said: “In rural Nigeria, there are no banks and people transact businesses with cash more often.

    “There is no doubt that we must have window for exchange. We must have policies by the CBN to have bank branches established in rural areas.

    “We need this extension for the most ordinary Nigerians,” Lawan said.

    Recall the CBN had on October 26 announced plans to redesign the 200, 500, and 1,000 naira notes.

    Sequel to the announcement by the apex bank, President Muhammadu unveiled the redesigned naira notes in November 2022.

    Reps summon bank operators, CBN Governor over scarcity of new naira notes

    Meanwhile, the House of Representatives has summoned bank operators and the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mr Godwin Emefiele, on the scarcity of the new naira notes.

    The bank operators are to appear on Wednesday, while the CBN governor will appear on Thursday.

    This is sequel to the adoption of a motion of urgent public importance by Rep. Sanda Soli (APC-Katsina) at the plenary in Abuja on Tuesday.

    In his motion, Soli said that all over the world, currencies were being ‘phased out’ and not ‘forced out’.

    He said: ”I am of the view that our currencies are being forced out and there is the need for some reviews and sensitisation by CBN and non-bank promoters.”

    The lawmaker called for review of the cashless policy, adding that CBN should ensure price stability.

    Although Soli said that the cashless policy was in tandem with global best practices, he, however, added that most banks in Nigeria did not have what it takes to ensure that such was achieved.

    He decried what he called the CBN’s refusal to listen to the cry of Nigerians for the extension of the Jan. 31 deadline for the deposit of the old naira notes, stating that this might have negative effect on the economy.

    Speaker of the House of Representatives, Rep Femi Gbajabiamila, said that as good as the policy was, the modus operandi and the timing were the problem.

    Gbajabiamila said that the currency should be phased out gradually, such that Nigerians would use the old and new naira together.

    “There is nothing wrong in reviewing a policy; banks are claiming they don’t have the new naira notes, while CBN is also claiming the banks have them,” he said.

    The speaker said that banks’ managing directors should be invited to brief the leadership or the ad-hoc committee to find out whether the money was available or they are being hoarded by banks.

    The House, however, called for a six-month extension of the deadline to make the new notes available and that President Muhammadu Buhari should intervene on the debacle in the interest of Nigerians.

    The House also set up an ad-hoc committee, led by Rep. Alhassan Ado-Doguwa, to meet with bank operators on Wednesday on Jan. 31 deadline on the old currency.

  • Nigeria’s economy’ll grow at subdued pace in 2023 – CBN Gov, Emefiele

    Nigeria’s economy’ll grow at subdued pace in 2023 – CBN Gov, Emefiele

    Mr Godwin Emefiele, Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has disclosed that available data and forecasts for key macroeconomic indicators suggest that Nigeria’s economy will grow at a subdued rate in 2023.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Mr Emefiele, who made the disclosure at the 289th post-MPC press briefing on Tuesday, stressed that increased spending towards the 2023 general election, amongst other factors, remains the key source of shocks to the Nigerian economy.

    He itemized the other factors to include the high level of insecurity in the country, perennial scarcity of premium motor spirit (PMS), high cost of other energy sources, the rising cost of debt servicing and deteriorating fiscal balances.

    “Available data and forecasts for key macroeconomic indicators for Nigeria suggest that the economy will continue to grow through 2023 but at a subdued pace.

    “The continued high level of insecurity, perennial scarcity of premium motor spirit (PMS) and high cost of other energy sources, increase spending towards the 2023 general election, the rising cost of debt servicing and deteriorating fiscal balances remain the key sources of shocks to the Nigerian economy.

    “Accordingly, the economy is forecast to grow in 2023 by 2.88% by the CBN estimate, 4.2% by the federal government estimate and 3% by the IMF estimate,” Emefiele said at the press briefing, following the apex bank’s first MPC meeting of the year.

  • BREAKING: No good news to shift deadline on old Naira notes – CBN Gov

    BREAKING: No good news to shift deadline on old Naira notes – CBN Gov

    Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mr Godwin Emefiele has said there is no good news to shift the deadline to retrieve old denominations of 200, 500 and 1,000 Naira notes from circulation.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Mr Emefiele made the disclosure at the 289th Post-MPC Press Briefing in Abuja on Tuesday.

    Emefiele stressed there was no reason to begin to talk about a shift for people to be able to deposit the old currencies and receive the new Naira notes.

    “I must say that unfortunately, I don’t have good news for those who feel that we should shift the deadline. My apologies.

    “The reason is that just as the President has said on more than two occasions, and even to people privately, 100 days is enough for anybody who has the old currency to deposit in the bank.

    “We took every measure to ensure that all the banks are open to receive all old currencies. We believe 100 days is more than adequate,” Emefiele said.

    The CBN Governor further disclosed that the apex bank had mandated the DMBs to feed the new notes into their Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) for Nigerians to have equal access.

    “We have increased disbursement of the new notes to them. There is an adequate quantity of new notes available.

    “Our mint is producing and we are supplying the banks. We have super agents in underserved areas like riverine communities, and CBN staff members have been out on mobilisation.

    “We believe that by January 31, the new naira notes would have permeated the nooks and crannies of the country,” he said.

    He said that the CBN had so far received about N1.5 trillion of the old Naira notes.

    He urged Nigerians to accelerate the process of taking their old notes to the banks before the deadline, adding that they should not fear harassment by security agents.

    “We have begged the EFCC and the ICPC to allow Nigerians deposit their old Naira notes,” he said.

    TNG reports the CBN redesigned the 200, 500 and 1,000 Naira notes in 2022 and pegged 31st January 2023 to withdraw the old notes from circulation.

  • CBN slams N1 million sanction on banks over new Naira notes

    CBN slams N1 million sanction on banks over new Naira notes

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has disclosed that any commercial bank that fails to pay the new naira notes to customers would be fined N1 million per money box on a daily basis.

    CBN Governor, Mr Godwin Emefiele, made this known at a sensitisation organised for market women operating at Ayegbaju International Market, Osogbo, on the new naira notes, eNaira and other related matters.

    Emefiele, represented by a CBN Deputy Director, Mr Adeleke Adelokun, said that the apex bank had printed enough naira notes, but observed that commercial banks were not collecting them.

    “As at today, CBN has printed enough new naira notes of N200, N500 and N1,000.

    “But, what we discovered was that most of the banks that are supposed to collect the new notes have not collected them. So we have put a sanction on the banks.

    “Any bank that fails to collect the new notes from CBN will pay N1 million as sanction per box per day and the amount they are to pay now will depend on the number of days they have not collected the notes,” he said.

    Emefiele said that the CBN team from Abuja, which had been in Osun since Wednesday, had been going round commercial banks in the state, meeting with their officials to ensure that they were paying out the new naira notes to customers.

    He said that the team was at Ayegbaju market to sensitise the market women on the newly-redesigned naira notes and eNaira App as well as how they can subscribe to eNaira for their business transactions.

    “We are here to educate you (the market women) on the new Naira notes and the need for you to turn in/deposit your old naira notes on or before Jan. 31 when the notes will cease to be a legal tender,” he said.

    In her own remarks, the CBN Branch Controller in Osun, Mrs Madojemu Daphne, said that currency management had faced several challenges, hence the need for the redesign of the naira notes.

    “Statistics shows significant hoarding of bank notes by members of the public, with N2.72 trillion out of the N3.26 trillion currency in circulation, as of June 2022, being outside the vaults of commercial banks and supposedly held by members of the public,” she said.

    Daphine, who was represented by Mrs Adebayo Omosolape, said that the old N200, N500 and N1,000 notes would cease to be legal tender by Jan. 31.

    CBN Information Clients Officer in Osun, Mrs Oluwatobi Rosiji, explained to the market women how to download the eNaira App and operate on their android phones.

  • Why were heads of CBN and INEC under siege from security agencies? – By Magnus Onyibe

    Why were heads of CBN and INEC under siege from security agencies? – By Magnus Onyibe

    There is currently a limit to the amount of cash that individuals and corporate bodies can withdraw from their bank accounts across the counter in Nigeria.

    But there is no limit to the absurdities that can happen in the financial services and political space in our dear country.

    The assertion above is justified by the fact that until Monday 16 January 2023 that he returned to his desk after his trip to the United States of America,USA where he was part of president Mohammadu Buhari’s delegation to the president Joe Biden,U.S.-Africa summit held in Washington DC,U.S.A ,13-15 December,the CBN governor, Godwin Emefiele had been unaccounted for.

    That is simply because he was declared a national security risk by the Department Of State Security Service,DSS,so he automatically became a fugitive since he could not return to Nigeria in the intervening period.

    It is not clear whether it is owing to the assumption in some quarters that he had been kidnapped in the US by a criminal gang that intended to compel him with a gun pointed at his head to disclose to them the code that would enable them gain access to Nigerian treasury and authorize the transfer of billions of dollars from Nigeria to designated accounts overseas,as we often see in Western movies.

    In any case before he traveled,one Kazaure Gudaji,claiming to be the Secretary of Presidential Committee on Reconciliation and Recovery of Stamp Duties Revenue, had alleged that N89 trillion revenues accruing to the federal government of Nigeria from stamp duties was misappropriated and diverted by the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Godwin Emefiele.

    But the spokesman of president Mohammadu Buhari, Mr Garba Shehu had promptly debunked the claim by stating that it was: “ludicrous that a member of the parliament would claim to be secretary of an executive committee”.

    Despite the denunciation of the seemingly scurrilous claims of Mr Gudaji ,analysts have boiled down Emefiele’s embattlement to the allegations by the self appointed committee that is insisting that he converted N89 trillion naira stamp duty charges collected from Nigerians through the banks and Nigeria Interbank Settlements System,NIBSS over a period of ten (10) years into a private account.
    Dear readers, please take note that N89 trillion naira is over four (4) times the value of our country’s 2023 national budget which is N21. 83 trillion naira.

    Here is a snippet of some of the mind boggling and jaws dropping allegations:

    “Furthermore, Stamp Duties revenue accruing to FGN is still growing at an astronomical rate, and this is quite evident from latest NIBSS statistics that reported eTransactions at N117.3 Trillion in just 4 months of 2022 alone, and by conservative estimates, these could reach over N400 Trillion by year end. It must be noted that NIBSS is just 1 of 15 other switches whose records have not been captured by Copyright-holder, and CBN is jealously guarding the huge revenue that is “above OIL” from Government…”

    But since no money has been declared missing from the CBN and Emefiele is back home,(presumably in the safe bosom of his dear wife and other family members) it can be safely assumed that the kidnap plot failed in the US,as the CBN governor ,who perhaps relying on voodoo from his birth place -Agbor,Delta state,was able to hypnotize his kidnappers and varnished into the thin air after which he manifested in Nigeria last Wednesday and subsequently showed up at work on Monday 16 January,2023.

    Of course what has been stated above is mere speculation as there has been no proof whatsoever.
    And that is because since Emefiele’s prolonged sojourn abroad,which in military terms equates to Missing In Acton,MIA,as no one could account for his whereabouts in the period of his absence.
    Ordinarily,government should have kept Nigerians abreast of what is going on,but did not deem it fit to give an account of where was the CBN governor,who is basically the ‘caretaker’ of our national vault from Sunday 11 December when he departed with President Buhari to the U.S to Monday 16 January which is about one month before Emefiele showed up at work.

    Owing to the national security implications,apart from allegations about being a sponsor of boko haram and related terrorist groups,l am demurring from going into details about other frightening imputations that have been made about the alleged high crimes against Mr Emefiele,because they are as wild and fantastic as anyone’s imagination can be stretched.

    But given the fact that the CBN treasury containing our common wealth which the government in power is supposed to be holding in trust for ‘We The People’ at whose behest it happens to be in power, (having been the ones that elected the president and his cabinet in 2015 and again in 2019)and which is assuming we were practicing a truly liberal democracy where the electorate matter; Nigerians aught to have been apprised of the reasons behind Emefiele’s long absence from his duty post and why he was under siege.

    It is not only disappointing,but ridiculous that the last thing Nigerians heard about Emefiele (before the press release on Monday 16/1/2023 by the CBN’s public affairs department that he is back on duty) was a failed attempt to arrest and lock him up when DSS sought to obtain an arrest warrant from a high court in Abuja, Federal Capital Territory, FCT headed by Justice John Tsoho who denied the agency the request.

    One of the justifications for denying the secret police the court’s authority was on the ground that it failed to present justifications solid enough to convince the judge on the need to the grant the order to arrest Godwin Emefiele,CBN governor at a time that he was leading the apex financial regulatory agency on the task of redesigning the naira-a critical national assignment with monumental socio-economic and even political impact on our beloved country.

    Propitiously, the SSS did the right thing on Monday (16/1/2023) by debunking the lie that was swirling around that the agency had arrested the embattled CBN governor after he resumed at his duty post.

    But as a result of the dearth of authentic information about Emefiele’s ordeal,which l would like to tag the Emefiele Saga,the rumor mill had gone into an overdrive,as Nigerians and our country’s foreign partners alike who were starved of the correct information,went on wild speculation spree.

    Arising from the above ,invention of bizarre scenarios like the one that l narrated in the introductory part of this intervention to fill the information gap between reality and fantasy was bound to happen simply because nature abhors vacuum.

    And the unsavory incident of the attempt to arrest the CBN governor by DSS underscores the opaqueness of our government about its activities which has been taken to a new level of incredulity by the current regime in charge of our beleaguered country.

    In fact the malaise of lack of transparency in public administration in our country is deeply concerning because the travail of the CBN governor of which government has failed to be open to Nigerians by explaining what the issues are and sharing with the public the actions being taken is bound to have a reverberating effect across financial institutions around the world.

    Given that the nation and indeed the world had just been regaled with damning and bewildering revelations about how the former accountant general of the federation,Ahmed Idris bilked the country of a humongous sum of one hundred and nine (N109 billion) naira by simply manipulating teacher’s payroll,it is obvious that there is no limit to the level of perversion in our our country’s financial services system. Which is a development that is gut wrenching and a negative tag on our identity as Nigerians as we travel internationally while on holiday or doing business around the world.

    In light of the sordidness of such a damnable reputation of our country in the eyes of global financial institutions,the rating of our country’s financial and economic strength by international rating agencies like Fitch and Moodys would further nose dive and lenders would rather thumb their nose at us,than give us thumps up.

    That is on top of the fact that our country has just made an appropriation bill (budget) for this year 2023 for a total of N21.83 trillion naira with only a paltry sum of about N9 trillion naira as revenue projected to be generated by the economy,while about N12 trillion of the budget would be sourced through borrowing.

    With a tattered reputation of financial recklessness evidenced by the chaos in our financial regulatory system highlighted earlier,who would be willing to lend Nigeria money? And if they do ,would it not be at cut throat rate because of the high risk rating status of our country stemming from the ludicrous events surrounding the handlers of the financial affairs of our country?

    The dire situation is further compounded by the fact that our country’s local debt stock that is is currently estimated to be about N55 trillion, and which some experts are even projecting that both the local and external loans would be amounting to N77 trillion by the time the current regime is exiting Aso Rock Villa by the end of May,is another albatross that should worry Nigerians.

    And the assertions above about our country’s current debt profile are not bogus as they are based on data and reports sourced from the Debt Management Office,DMO.

    The gargantuan size of our national debt is the reason over 90% of our revenue is dedicated to loan servicing of which it has been recently reported that a princely sum of nearly $15 billion dollars has been expended in servicing of our foreign debt in the past eight (8) years.

    Worse still,an International Monetary Funds,IMF projection is that by 2026,one hundred (100%) percent of Nigeria’s revenue would be dedicated towards servicing public debts.

    It is some of these liabilities that are casting dark shadows over the future of our country as we move towards another change of guard in Aso Rock Villa and a very likely change of ruling party at the center as it had happened in 2015 when Peoples Democratic Party,PDP yielded the position to APC as a consequence of even less hardship compared to the current burden of multiple dimensions of extreme poverty and frightening level of insecurity whose weight are crushing Nigerians.

    Right now, what should even be giving Nigerians more sleepless nights is that it is only a tiny fraction of the 2023 national budget,a miserly 23% or so of the N21.83 trillion is what would be left for capital projects,(after hiving off a huge portion for debt servicing and recurrent expenditure)in a country of 200 million people suffering from acute shortage of infrastructure in the manner that the Sahara,Kalahari or any desert at all is bereft of water.

    As we all know,deserts are uninhabitable by ordinary humans,except the Berbers and Tuaregs who have adapted to the harsh environment.

    With Nigerian environment degenerating to the level of being like a desert,it is understandable why Nigerian youths have been migrating in droves to foreign lands where the grass appear greener-also known as ‘japa’ syndrome.

    So,by all indications,owing to the nation’s present colossal debt burden,Nigerians are guaranteed more hardship as it would be another desert experience for the long suffering masses who elect not to ‘japa’ but to remain in our country in the next few years.

    Arising from the scenario painted above,the incoming government from 29 May this year would certainly be faced with the priority of first of all rescuing our country from financial entanglements in order to restore hope before any other action can be taken.

    Which is why Nigerians on 25 February presidential election D-Day must elect a president with cognate experience, garnered from being on the saddle before, so that he would not get to Aso Rock Villa and spend a better part of his first term trying to understand how best to untangle the web of debts in order to claw our country out of the debt hole that it has sunken. Otherwise, it would be very tough,if not an impossibility for Nigerians to escape the current looming hardship that may get worse if the wrong person gets into the saddle of leadership in Aso Rock Villa.

    That is my personal assessment.

    In any case, the masses are already attuned to or adapting to the grim condition which they are doomed to continue to contend with this year and the coming years as some economists aver that individual Nigerians would be carrying a debt burden of at least N385,000 each,if the projected debt of N77 Trillion is shared equally amongst two hundred (200)million members of the populace.

    In other words,if a child is born in Nigeria today,he/ she would from the moment of birth be carrying a debt burden of about N385,000.

    Do not blame me if it sounds alarmist because l am just the messenger.

    Now,compare the chaotic and opaque situation in the top echelon of our country’s political leadership and the financial system as well as the security monitoring and enforcement space whereby nobody has taken the responsibility of explaining to Nigerians what the matter really is with the CBN governor; to the events in the US wherein classified documents were discovered in the private office and residence of current president Joe Biden,and Americans have asked hard questions,(deservedly so) until the presidency started giving them answers.

    It is part of the beauty of democracy that Americans are being briefed consistently about the development starting from president Biden who had been bombarded with questions by reporters at every turn,to the chief press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre who had no other choice than to be conducting daily press conferences,and finally to the Attorney General/Justice Secretary,Merrick Garland,who has dutifully explained to Americans the steps that he has taken so far and the reason he had to appoint an independent investigator to get to the bottom of how and why classified documents were found in the private office and home of President Joe Biden.

    That is a classical case of the people pushing for accountability from their political leaders and public office holders as well as a striking evidence of true democracy at work.

    As has been done in the U.S.,which is why the truth is presently unfolding,why has president Buhari not caused our Justice Minister,Abubakar Malami to appoint a special investigator to truly find out what is the cause of the hoopla raised by SSS against Emefiele and the hullabaloo going on in the CBN which is the nation’s financial institution that is the lender of last resort and therefore a critical organ of government.

    Considering that the International Monetary Fund,IMF had advised Nigeria to phase out CBN financing of the government in order to the reduce double-digit inflation which has reached an unprecedented rate, (in excess of 21% according to NBS records) even as president Buhari had also requested that NASS converts the over N23 trillion worth of loans to government by the CBN via the financial instrument of Ways and Means to 40 years bonds at 9%(securitization) which effectively boils down to transferring current debt to the next generation,search no more for why our country is in a quagmire.

    That is not all.

    In the twilight of this administration’s life span,the federal government has also sought and received another extra nearly one trillion naira loan from the apex bank.

    In light of the realities above ,who is after Emefiele to the extent of trying to force him out of office before the end of his tenure when he has a huge responsibility of tidying up CBN books (that have been under HI’s management for 8 years) before the curtain falls on Buhari’s administration?

    The multi trillion naira poser now is: can the presidency at whose behest Emefiele occupies the office or politicians who are being accused of being behind the CBN governor’s travails based on allegations that his naira redesign project and cash withdrawals limit are a ploy to prevent politicians from having access to cash owing to the cap on the amount of cash that can be withdrawn from banks,be the antagonists.
    Although,those considering the matter from a political prism claim that the policy would deny politicians of access to the cash that they could have applied in buying votes during the general elections coming up in less than forty (40) days time, but in Justifying the naira re-design initiative, and limit on cash withdrawal policy; Emefiele applying the optics of an economist,had said that N2.73 trillion,which is over 80 per cent of the total cash of N3.23 trillion in circulation is outside the banking system.

    So,the policy is aimed at pulling the funds into the system,reducing counterfeiting, encouraging a cashless economy, staving off cash hoarding,bringing more people into the financial sector,as well eliminating the incidences of kidnapping and terrorism which cash payments facilitates.
    Keeping in mind that president Buhari has the power to sack Emefiele even when his tenure of five (5) years is yet to be completed,(in the manner that former president Goodluck Jonathan suspended and subsequently sacked Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi who later became emir of Kano before he was deposed) Mr President in my reckoning is most likely not Emefiele’s traducer.

    That is because l am assuming that he would not go round in circles to fire Emefiele,if he is displeased with his performance or he has been criminally indicted for any impropriety.

    If per adventure l am correct in my second guessing of president Buhari,in any case he hardly fires his appointees based on public outcry against them,who want’s Emefiele out of the CBN?

    That question would be best answered by the members of the intelligence and security community who should be talking more to Nigerians to avoid the unnecessary tension stemming from speculations and fake news that are currently suffocating our country.

    To appreciate the criticality of the role of effective communication in governance, consider how the prompt media statement by the SSS making it clear that it had not arrested Emefiele on Monday 16 February 2023 as earlier reported in the media, helped clear the fog before it could gain currency.

    The crisis situation in the CBN would not be too worrying,if the chairman of Independent National Electoral Commission,INEC ,Professor Mahmood Yakubu had not like CBN’s Emefiele been threatened as well with an arrest also by one of our country’s security agencies.

    In professor Yakubu’s case,it is in connection with alleged flawed asset declaration action which is in contravention of the rules of the Code of Conduct bureau.

    But pundits have argued that the plan to arrest the INEC chairman Yakubu is not just about his alleged failure to declare his assets correctly,which they claim is just a cover up.

    But they are insisting that it is a plot to prevent him from conducting the forthcoming election in which he intends to deploy Bimordal Voter Registration System,BVAS which is amongst other high technology based systems that have proven to be solid proof against election rigging.

    So,what the hell is going on in our country’s intelligence and security space as the apparatchiks appear to have become so much on edge based on the unusual spate of attempts to arrest top members of government incharge of strategic and sensitive organs currently executing the most consequential event in the life of our country-the recruitment of the next set of our political leaders via general elections?

    It is remarkable that it also took an injunction by a court of law prohibiting professor Yakubu’s arrest and detention to keep him at his desk where he is currently saddled with the onerous duty of superintending over the general elections commencing 25 February which is more or less forty (40)days away.

    Can readers imagine the effect that arresting and keeping the INEC chairman away from his duty post could have caused the nation at this critical point in time,if the prayers of one Somadina Uzoabaka who sued INEC chairman to court in Abuja were to have been granted by the judge?

    That would have likely caused the postponement of the elections and thus become a repeat of what occurred in 2015 when the general elections were postponed for six (6) weeks.

    Incidentally,election postponement which INEC chairman is vehemently opposed to and working assiduously to avoid is in tandem with the vision of president Buhari who has also vowed to prevent it as evidenced in his speeches to multiple local and global audiences. In fact our president is known to have made solemn promises to Nigerians and our international partners that his goal is to bequeath Nigeria with the freest and fairest elections before he exits Aso Rock Villa on 29 May this year.

    With such a determined and focused mindset to leave a legacy of a reformed and robust electioneering system,how would Mr president allow forces of anarchy (seemingly invisible) cause a postponement or cancellation of the scheduled election by disrupting activities in the CBN and INEC under his watch?
    Whatever the case may be ,l am convinced that postponement or cancellation of the general elections is not in President Buhari’s contemplation right now.

    Nevertheless,one curious and striking situation that l have observed is that lately there have been so many co-incidences of clashes between the law enforcement community and the interpretative society.

    For instance,barely one month ago,the Chief of Army Staff, COAS,General Farouk Yahaya was also charged for contempt of court and his arrest was ordered by the court presided over by justice Halima Abdulmalik in Minna,Niger state.

    Similarly, within the same period,the Inspector General Of Police,lGP was also issued a bench warrant for contempt of court.The order was by Justice Bolaji Olajuwon,a Federal Capital Territory,FCT high court judge.

    Around the same time in December last year,Abdulrasheed Bawa,Chairman of Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC was equally directed to be committed to jail for contempt by a court in the Federal Capital Territory,FCT.

    Although the trio have caused the court orders to be discharged,these are nevertheless uncommon occurrences and suggest lack of coordination between relevant federal government agencies.

    So,what is going on in the interpretative, security intelligence,military and law enforcement communities in our country?

    What is responsible for the chaos?

    Why is it that there appears to be an ongoing tuff war?

    It would still be fresh in the memory of some Nigerians when the SSS and EFCC,both of which report directly to the presidency literally crossed swords publicly as the EFCC laid siege on the residences of an ex DG of SSS with the intent to arrest him and the agency that he had led had to give him cover.

    It was such an embarrassment that both government security agencies that could have resolved their differences administratively and amicably by seating around a table over coffee/tea with the Office Of The National Security Adviser,ONSA as umpire,exhibited their rivalry via naked and public display of raw power to the dismay of most Nigerians.

    It is my hope,and in-fact my fervent prayers that our country security agencies have grown beyond that sordid past.

    It also necessary to recall that after June 12,1993 elections,late Chief Arthur Nzeribe and a certain Abimbola Davies riding on a civil society platform known as Association for Better Nigeria,ABN,went to court with the intention of scuttling the process of transition from military to multi party democracy.
    Based on the nefarious activities of ABN,civil rights and democracy advocate, Beko Randlsome-Kuti (of blessed memory) went to court to obtain an injunction against ABN that was allegedly engaged in subversive activities inimical to democracy.

    And ABN was then restrained by a court judgement issued by Justice Dolapo Akinsanya.

    But,late Nzeribe and his group,two days before the election,approached a high court in Abuja headed by Justice Bassey Ikpeme, which granted them an order lifting the restraining restraint.

    The rest they say is history because the June June 1993 election that is believed to have been won by Moshood K.O Abiola of blessed memory degenerated into a debacle that has had a reverberating and highly consequential effect on our country some thirty (30) years ago.

    Do we have a copy cat scenario of the events that happened to 1993 general elections in our hands ?

    Now,there are two significant take aways from the ongoing saga in the national security,intelligence and judicial space.

    The first is that the DSS went to court to seek legal backing for its intention to arrest Emefiele.That is very professional as it reflects a marked departure from the past when that Standard Operating Procedure, SOP was not followed.

    The recent past experience with our security agencies is that more often than not,they effect arrests without first of all obtaining court order,as they should.

    Secondly,unlike Justice Bassey Ikpeme who seemingly did not really care about the broader implications of his action of lifting a restraining order by another court,(in what some have referred to as midnight judgement) in contrast,Justice John Tsoho, demurred from granting an exparte motion to arrest Emefiele,CBN governor. And on 29 December last year,Justice M.A Hassan restrained all the security agencies in the country from arresting or detaining the CBN governor, just as on 4 January this year,the same judge also issued a similar order restraining any law enforcement agency from arresting and detaining,INEC chairman,Yakubu.

    Those actions from the bench are evidence that integrity,which seemed to have taken flight in the recent past, appear to be returning to the temple of justice in Nigeria.

    So far, the order of the court has been respected with regards to INEC chairman, but it was not clear if the same respect would apply to CBN governor’s case until the SSS released a media statement on Monday 16 February which has left no one in doubt about the fact that Emefiele has regained his freedom.

    In the heat of the Imbloglio in December,Edward Adamu,a Deputy Governor of CBN had told the parliament that Emefiele was under the weather,and it had also been mentioned that he had been on his annual leave.

    Whatever the case may be,it was critically important that the presidency that is CBN governor’s employer provided Nigerians with information about his whereabouts.

    That is because it can not be taken fore-granted that government can not guarantee the safety of its employee, particularly,the one who holds the keys to the national vault.

    Responsively,the storm appears to be over with Emefiele at his desk indicating that President Buhari has now asserted his authority in line with the dictum: the buck ends at the president’s desk.

     

    Magnus Onyibe,an entrepreneur,public policy analyst,author,development strategist,alumnus of Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy,Tufts University, Massachusetts,USA and a former commissioner in Delta state government, sent this piece from lagos.
    To continue with this conversation,pls visit www.magnum.ng

  • CBN Gov, Godwin Emefiele meets Buhari behind closed doors

    CBN Gov, Godwin Emefiele meets Buhari behind closed doors

    The Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mr Godwin Emefiele met behind closed doors with President Muhammadu Buhari in Abuja on Thursday.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Mr Emefiele did not speak to journalists after the closed door meeting with President Buhari.

    However, it was gathered that the CBN Governor briefed the president on the activities of the CBN since the introduction of the redesigned 200, 500 and 1000 Naira notes.

    Emefiele is believed to have presidential backing on the Naira notes redesign and withdrawal limit policy introduced by the apex bank in December 2022.

    The CBN Governor had earlier attended a meeting between Buhair and the visiting Director General of the Arab Bank for Economic Development, Dr Sid Ould Tah, at the State House, Abuja.

    TNG reports Emefiele’s visit to the Presidential Villa was the first since he resumed work at the CBN after embarking on annual leave in December.

    It was speculated that the CBN governor travelled out of the country amidst fears he would be apprehended by operatives of the Department of State Service (DSS) over several allegations against him, including terrorism financing.

    However, the DSS dismissed such allegations, including online reports that its operatives on Monday invaded the headquarters of the CBN and took over the office of the governor of the apex bank.

  • CBN bends conditions for banks to get new Naira notes

    CBN bends conditions for banks to get new Naira notes

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) says it has bent backwards and waived some of the conditionality for accessing currency notes in order to accommodate commercial banks in the country to pick up the newly redesigned Naira notes.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports CBN Governor, Mr Godwin Emefiele made this disclosure while calling on commercial banks to approach the apex bank branches across the country to pick up the new Naira notes.

    Emefiele made the call when the apex bank took its sensitisation tour on the adoption of the newly redesigned naira notes to Computer Village, Ikeja, on Wednesday in Lagos.

    He said that the new naira notes were in the apex bank’s vaults awaiting pick up by the commercial banks.

    “We have been calling upon the banks to approach the Central Bank of Nigeria across the country to come and pick up the new notes; we have even waived some of the conditionality for accessing currency notes in order to accommodate the banks.

    “The banks were being given slots before, but now the Central Bank of Nigeria is bending over backward to accommodate the demands of the banks in order to service them, so that they can service you and so that everybody will have access to the new naira notes,’’ Emefiele said.

    Emefiele who was represented by Mr Kofo Salam-Alada, Director, Legal Services Department, CBN, said that the apex bank was seriously working to ensure that the new notes permeated everywhere.

    He said that the apex bank was currently going round commercial banks to monitor banks and their Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) to ensure that they stopped paying customers the new naira notes over the counter but via the ATMs.

    Emefiele said: “part of what we are doing is that we have monitors going around the banks now, I have been to some ATMs this morning and I’ve lodged a report and I’ve spoken to the management of the various banks.”

    He also said that penalties await any bank which failed to come and pick up the new notes and failure to lodge money into their ATM machines.

    He assured the marketers that the experiences they were having would soon be sorted out.

    Emefiele urged them to call these numbers- 08176657641, 08176657642, 08176656721, 07080650791, and send messages to newnaira@cbn.gov.ng,  should they have any problem accessing the new notes.

    Emefiele reiterated that the Jan. 31 deadline for the submission of the old naira notes was sacrosanct, urging people to go and deposit their old notes and not to be caught unawares.

    He urged people to also make use of the enaira and other electronic channels to transact their banking business, adding that the apex bank was already taking steps to increase the number of merchants to good position where enaira would become acceptable.

    The President of the Coalition of Associations in Computer Village, Mr Timmy David, urged the CBN to enforce their mandate by ensuring that the new notes were accessible before the deadline.

    “There should be no banks that should not be given the new naira notes from the ATMs, all ATMs should load the new naira notes.

    “As we are giving the old notes, we should be able to take back the new notes; this will enable people to transact their day to day business. If the machines are not dispensing the new notes, then it will not circulate,’’ he said.

    Emefiele and his team visited the Palace of the Olu of Ikeja Land, and was received by the Olukosi of Ikeja Land, Chief Lateef Oluseyi.

    Emefiele briefed him on the apex bank’s new policies and its decision to change the old 1,000, 500 and 200 denominations.

    He also washed the new N1000 note with water to clear the doubts of some sections of society about authenticity of the new notes.

    Redesign of Naira notes not targeted at any group or persons – CBN restates

    Meanwhile, the CBN Branch Manager in Imo State, Mrs Boma Oruwari has restated the position of the apex bank that the decision to redesign the Naira notes was not targeted at any group or persons.

    Mrs Oruwari stated this when officials of the Imo branch of the CBN on Wednesday visited the Owerri relief market to sensitise traders on the need to deposit their old notes in the banks before the January 31 deadline.

    The exercise is part of efforts to introduce the newly-redesigned naira notes to the traders and urged them to accept them as legal tender.

    Addressing the traders, the Branch Manager, Mrs Boma Oruwari, said that the banknotes that were being phased out remain legal tender till January 31, 2023.

    She said that as such, they should not be rejected as a means of exchange for the purchase of goods and services.

    According to her, the old notes were phased out for a variety of reasons, including shortage of clean and fit bank notes, counterfeiting, high cost of cash management and abuse of the naira.

    “These issues and challenges made the Central Bank to change and redesign the higher denominations of N1,000, N500 and N200 bank notes.

    “Now that we have changed and redesigned these higher denominations, we are here in relief market to explain that only three of the current eight denominations were redesigned;

    “All other banknotes, N5, N10, N20, N50, and N100 are not affected and the decision of the CBN to redesign three denominations of the naira is not targeted at any group or persons,” she said.

    The branch manager also said that the current banknotes that were being phased out will circulate side by side with the redesigned banknotes till the deadline.

    She also said that there were no limit to the amount individuals or corporate bodies can deposit during the transition period and no charges on bank deposits.

    “Visit your commercial bank to deposit the old notes. Those without bank accounts are encouraged to visit banks of their choice to open accounts.

    “Account opening is easy. You can also approach the nearest CBN authorized agent to make your deposit if you reside in a rural area.

    “There is no limit to deposit of N1,000, N500, N200 banknotes an individual or corporate body can make during the transition, and there are no charges on bank deposits.”

    She further noted that there was no outright exchange of new banknotes for old notes deposited in the commercial banks.

    She also encouraged the traders to explore other payment channels such as eNaira, Point of Sale, Electronic transfers, internet Banking, Mobile money operators and agents, for banking transactions.