Tag: Godwin Emefiele

  • Guests at Port Harcourt event receive new naira notes, tubers of yam

    Guests at Port Harcourt event receive new naira notes, tubers of yam

    Amidst scarcity of the new Naira notes across Nigeria, guests at a recent occasion in Port Harcourt were reportedly given new naira notes and two tubers of yam each.

    In the photos making the rounds online, the chairs at the venue were carefully arranged and two tubers of yam together with new naira notes were spotted on the chairs.

    This is happening amid the naira scarcity and struggles Nigerians have been facing since the release of the newly designed naira notes.

    Reacting to this, @nwabundo51 wrote: “They created this chaos so that they can easily learn the people with this cuz they know that a lot of people are hungry”

    @Enoredia said: “Wow I thought they turned people to yam ?.”

    @prince_chinedu_stephen wrote: “What’s happening here??? don’t tell me if politicians hand work.”

    Camera captures bank workers scale fence to evade aggrieved customers
    Guests at Port Harcourt event receive new naira notes, tubers of yam

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that the CBN governor, Mr Godwin Emefiele, in a public announcement, extended the deadline for legal tender status of the old N200, N500 and N1000 notes from 31 January to 10 February.

    The extension followed a public outcry that greeted the scarcity of the new naira banknotes. The CBN governor announced the extension after meeting with President Buhari, and directed banks to receive the old bank notes even after the deadline.

    Meanwhile, a new generation bank in Ekiti on Sunday ran into trouble waters as the Central Bank of Nigeria, uncovered N6 million of new naira notes hoarded by its branch along bank road, Ado-Ekiti.

    The Apex bank Deputy Director, Oluwole Owoeye uncovered the hoarded newly redesigned currencies while leading a team of officials on monitoring exercise in the state.

    Owoeye accused the bank of deliberately hoarding the new banknotes it had collected from the CBN for almost two weeks.

    The Deputy Director who said there was no excuse for keeping the money, saying Deposit Money Banks are sabotaging the apex bank’s efforts in making the new notes available for Nigerians.

    His words, “I’m currently at the Bank, Ado-Ekiti as part of this monitoring compliance with the guidelines by CBN. They have six million which they have collected from the bank for almost two weeks. They have not dispensed any. They said they are yet to configure their ATM.

    “I don’t know why. I have brought their attention to the penalty clause of one million per day. They have five ATMs. They don’t have any reason for keeping this money.

    “The zonal service manager, Mr Tunde Onipede promised that by 10am latest tomorrow (Monday), because I told him by latest 10:00 am I’ll be here and I want to see the machine dispensing this money.

    “What is the name again? Olumide Owolabi (Service Manager, Ado) & Motunrayo Babayele. My name is Oluwole Owoeye and I am a deputy director of CBN”.

  • 13 political parties threaten to withdraw from 2023 election, if ….

    13 political parties threaten to withdraw from 2023 election, if ….

    At least, Thirteen political parties, out of 18, that are to participate in the 2023 general elections, which are scheduled for February 25 and March 11, have threatened to withdraw from the election, if the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, extends the deadline for naira swap.

    This threat was issued in a statement by National Chairman of the Action Alliance, Kenneth Udeze, on Monday, February 7, 2023.

    Udeze noted that this was necessary for the event that the Central Bank of Nigeria extended the February 10 naira swap deadline.

    13 political parties threaten to withdraw from 2023 election, if ....

    The redesign of the N200, N500, and N1,000 banknotes was lauded by the coalition of political party chairmen, who also urged that the policy must remain in place.

    Udeze at a press briefing, said, “We hereby announce that at least 13 out of the 18 political parties in Nigeria will not be interested in the 2023 general elections and indeed we shall withdraw our participation from the electoral process if this currency policies are suspended or cancelled or if the deadline is further shifted.”

    TheNewsguru.com (TNG) reports that CBN had already stated that it is not planning to extend the deadline for the use of old naira notes.

    Speaking during a briefing on Friday at the apex bank’s office in Lagos, Godwin Emefiele, CBN governor, said the CBN, as well as deposit money banks (DMBs) were working to address the current challenges with the circulation of the new currency notes.

    The CBN had issued a deadline of January 31 for the use of the old naira notes, but it was recently extended to February 10.

    Speaking on the issue, Emefiele said “I want to say unfortunately again, this time, we will not be looking at extension of deadline because we are the central bank and the deposit money banks are doing everything to address the challenges.”

  • Naira redesign: Oshiomhole flays CBN Gov, Emefiele

    Naira redesign: Oshiomhole flays CBN Gov, Emefiele

    Former Governor of Edo State, Adams Oshiomhole has said the Naira redesign policy by Mr Godwin Emefiele, Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is play to scuttle the forthcoming general election.

    Oshiomhole, who is a former President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), accused Emefiele, of taking advantage of President Muhammadu Buhari’s anti-corruption stance to pit him against Nigerians.

    He stated this on Sunday while speaking on a Channels TV programme, The 2023 Verdict.

    “I am sorry to say that it is not a secret that he wanted to contest for the APC presidential ticket.

    “He bought N100 million APC nomination form and the President directed that all those who wanted to contest for the presidential ticket should resign their appointments.

    “I remember that during that time he went to the Villa, I believe, he went to consult and when they asked him if he had been cleared to proceed on his political ambition, he said, there will be big news soon.

    “The only news we have heard is this change of currency. We have not heard the news of why he didn’t proceed with his political ambition.

    “We didn’t hear anything from him. The only news we heard is the naira redesign. Emefiele could have chosen a policy that will discredit the party.

    “And unfortunately, everybody knows that President Buhari’s constituency in Nigeria is the army of the poor.

    “The elite have never supported him. And it is these poor people who are hit the most by this policy.

    “When you talk about vote buying, we have moved from a situation that all you need is to compromise the police and the INEC, then, you write the results and they are declared and you start balancing the ballot paper later.

    “You can see that the tension in the bank is not to eliminate abuses, but to prevent the election from taking place.

    “The policy will hurt the election process as the INEC will have to revise its budget as the allocated funds to buy PMS and to bring election materials cannot meet that need now.

    “It is in that context that whoever scuttles the election would have scuttled the chances of the APC winning the election.

    “I am happy that the National Assembly captured the mood of the people. This is because what separates dictatorship and democracy is the presence of the parliament.

    “They live and represent 360 constituencies across the 774 local government areas in Nigeria. They are in touch with their people and they have spoken”.

    On the redesigning of the naira, Oshiomhole said: “I believe that Emefiele, knowing the posture of the President against corruption, used that to achieve other objectives.”

  • Naira redesign: CBN Gov, Emefiele is fighting back – Gov Ganduje

    Naira redesign: CBN Gov, Emefiele is fighting back – Gov Ganduje

    Governor of Kano State, Abdullahi Ganduje has alleged Mr Godwin Emefiele, Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is fighting back with the Naira redesign policy.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Governor Ganduje made the allegation in a statement on Sunday by his Chief Press Secretary, Abba Anwar.

    Ganduje alleged the untimely implementation of the Naira swap policy was deliberately done by Emeifiele as a fighting back strategy for failing to get the presidential ticket under the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC).

    “The CBN Governor is only doing this to cause confusion in the forthcoming elections for no just reason. He has not been in good mood for long, because he failed to secure the presidential ticket on the platform of our great party, the APC,” Ganduje said.

    Insisting that the Kano State Government and APC in the State are totally against the action of the CBN Governor, the Kano State Governor said “currency redesign is done across the globe, but not in the way we are witnessing in our country. The timing is wrong, the deadline given is very wrong and deliberate”.

    Meanwhile, Anwar in the statement revealed part of the measures taken by the State Government to cushion the effects of the hardship caused by the Naira swap.

    “We will summon bank managers very soon to interrogate the shortage of new Naira notes in banks. They should come over and explain to us, why our people are still suffering over this issue of Naira Swap. And I will go to them individually to supervise what is happening and why.

    “We have a plan in the pipeline to start distributing palliatives very soon across all the 44 local governments, to cushion the effect of the hardship caused by the CBN Governor, to our people,” the statement reads.

  • The political dimension of the Naira redesign – By Dakuku Peterside

    The political dimension of the Naira redesign – By Dakuku Peterside

    Nigerians are facing the reality of scarcity of cash literarily. Banks are overwhelmed by angry customers demanding money, the ATMs are flooded with furious Nigerians struggling to withdraw cash, and some spend the whole day hoping to get a few Naira notes to pay bills. POS operators complain of a lack of money; a few have charged between 15% and 20% to customers to get some cash. Most Nigerians are stranded because the bank apps for transfers need to be fixed, and most cannot make or receive transferred money. Naira notes are in high demand, and the newly redesigned notes are rare to get unless by a privileged few. There is confusion everywhere, and people are coming to terms with this chaos .

    However, the pressure this exerts on Nigeria’s fragile socio-political and economic conditions is enormous and gradually heading to a tipping point. Social media are awash with harrowing videos of people’s reactions in various parts of Nigeria, and they all point to the pervading rage , frustration, and hardship people are going through. All these are happening at a time of heightened political activities near the 2023 general elections, with various permutations, intrigues and strategies of political parties and their candidates to win the voters . Without being the intendment , it is a recipe for upheaval if not checked. The political ramifications of the Naira redesign are evident, but the implications, intended and unintended consequences, are unfolding.

    Money and politics are like the Sesame twins. Money enables politics, and politics determine how money is allocated. Money in politics is both a force for good and, at the same time, can be an opposing force. Whenever cash is under any form of threat, politics react. Politics is reacting vehemently, and claims and counterclaims have been made about the Naira redesign’s impact on society, the economy, and politics.

    The Buhari administration and the CBN are orchestrating a demonetisation policy that has become the centrepiece of Nigeria’s monetary policy. Although it may seem that this demonetisation policy is a continuation of CBN’s push for a cashless economy driven more by technology than the use of old fiat notes, however, the real meaning is lost in translation, and people need clarification.
    Is this a Naira redesign exercise, a cash swap exercise, or a policy for proper currency management , addressing inflation, taming counterfeit notes and cash stockpiled for illegal political activities? Or is it all of these things put together? The problem is that everybody understands and interprets the actions differently, with unclear and dichotomous interpretations of what is happening. The critical question is: did the CBN effectively communicate this policy’s aims, goals, process and intended impact to the people? How did the media frame this policy, and how did Nigerians interpret and make sense of it all? Just as the 2023 general election is around the corner, is this new policy of the CBN politically motivated? These questions merit consideration if we are to understand what is going on and how to tackle the many negative implications before much damage is done.

    In recent times, other nations have done some currency redesigns, and we can learn from their experiences. The UK and India have redesigned their currencies lately. But I will use the example of India for obvious reasons that it is closer to Nigeria as a developing nation than the UK. In 2016, Prime Minister Narendra Modi declared that the country’s two highest-denomination currency notes (Rs 1,000 and Rs 500) would be withdrawn immediately from the market. The plan, termed demonetisation by the press, was announced as Modi’s masterstroke against “black money”. As economic experiments go, it was a big, bold move. There was no precedent anywhere in the world for a sudden financial shock of this scale. However, the exercise proved not to be a key determinant of the outcome of Indian elections that year . Unlike the case of india, will this exercise have more significant political implications, some unintended, that are capable of determining the outcome of the elections or truncating our democracy? Let us examine five ways the Naira redesign will affect our politics this year.

    First, it will reasonably eliminate vote buying and other forms of financial inducement to the voters, INEC workers or election entreprenuers bent on rigging the election. Some have argued that this policy is a master stroke by the government against vote buying and a blow to the corruption of the electoral process. With the introduction of BVAS and INEC’s resolve to conduct a free and fair election, the window for rigging has become very narrow. Only vote buying is the significant leeway to election rigging. Arguably, some candidates and political parties have stockpiled cash for this purpose. This sudden Naira redesign and swap may have dislodged the use of this stockpiled money to buy votes and bribe INEC officials . Statistics made available by CBN have it that over 80% of the nation’s currency is outside the bank vaults and possibly stored in private vaults by corrupt members of the elite class who are involved in one crime or the other and who wouldn’t be able to defend the source of such huge funds if brought to the bank. Some Nigerians applaud CBN for coming up with such a robust plan at such a strategic season in the country when new leaders are elected . This policy will likely guarantee a bribery-free election by 2023, where voters and agencies would not be offered money to vote a candidate into power.
    However, some Nigerians are bemoaning their fate because of the hardship this new Naira design palaver is causing in the country, and they feel that the timing of the implementation is wrong even if the intention is genuine. The real threat is that elections is a major logistics venture that is capital intensive . As a parting gift to most Nigerians, President Buhari, in his wisdom, has decided that the current generation of Nigerians must also suffer the trauma of emergency currency change which the older generation suffered in 1984. His idea then, as it is today, is that it is a method to catch looters of the national treasury who will be forced to reveal their stolen monies. The problem then, as it is today, is that whatever the approach’s merits are, there is massive collateral damage among the masses.

    Second, the Naira redesign stops the inflow of illicit money used for political purposes, especially proceeds of money laundering and financial crime. Often, cash facilitates illegal and criminal transactions because they are not easy to trace. We know of corrupt government officials stashing cash at home to the tune of billions of Naira because they cannot put it in the bank for fear of being detected. These illicit monies always find its way in the system during elections for different unlawful purposes.Drug dealers and kidnappers struggle to operate within a cashless society. A friend told me that the kidnapping has reduced in the past few days of the cash scarcity in Nigeria. There is a direct correlation between the ease of moving cash and kidnapping and banditry, especially in the North East and South East.

    Third, the Naira redesign has strangulated economic activities and added to citizens’ financial pressure. This may cause anger against the government and the ruling party, and at this crucial time of the general election, it may be costly. Economic hardship often leads voters to punish the ruling party and are prone to favouring the opposition. This happened in Greece and Italy. Therefore, experiments in macroeconomic policy are rare, especially in an election year. That it will not help the ruling party electorally is a no-brainer. This policy has split APC in the middle. Some people feel that the policy is made to undermine the APC presidential candidate and his team. Others argue that this policy that has caused coax among people is like an electoral campaign advantage to the opposition, and the APC-led government should have waited until after the elections. The tripartite problem of runaway inflation, economic hardship, and now, the Naira redesign crisis is making selling APC difficult for the party and candidates. The opposition may be having a field day and milking the self-imposed, APC-induced problems almost three weeks before the election.

    Fourth, the Naira redesign crisis is exacerbating the existing excruciating inflationary trends. This may seem paradoxical given that scarcity of cash should have a deflationary tendency instead of an inflationary one. However, this case is different because of the combination of other inflationary elements within the context of the Nigerian economy. These inflationary tendencies are seen in the high cost of fuel, food, and other necessities, and these forces are so strong that the naira redesign crises have not dented the inflationary trend. Besides, the cash cost is high, which is transferred to the price of goods and services, keeping the inflation on. Inflation at the peak of campaign and elections is definitely not a good mix.

    Fifth, the Naira redesign crisis, added to fuel scarcity , and pervasive insecurity , is leading to alienation of the populace which can lead to a rise in anger, frustration, a series of protests and social dislocation. This could threaten public peace and ultimately lead to the abortion of the elections. Some argue that the fifth columnists in the seat of power are orchestrating the crises to truncate the elections and instal an Interim National Government. As preposterous as this may sound, any show of public discontent and opprobrium, especially nearer the election, may make these purported dooms day a reality.
    Now is the time to rein the excesses of the Naira crises, deal with both the intended and unintended consequences and give the Nigerian electorate a reasonable chance to vote based on their conscience and elect leaders that will make a difference in their lives.

  • Will Emefiele go down history colourless? – By Dave Baro-Thomas

    Will Emefiele go down history colourless? – By Dave Baro-Thomas

    By Dave Baro-Thomas

    Many have hailed the currency redesign policy as novel, and that singular act could position the nation on the pedestal of unprecedented progress. From the blues, suck-away pits began to vomit billions of naira, over-head water tanks ooze out billions of naira, dug-up graveyards had billions of naira in place of presumed skeletons, and the billions of naira forcefully confiscated by unscrupulous Nigerians for clandestine purposes came out like Lazarus from the grave. Some terrorists became philanthropists overnight by giving back to helpless Nigerians what they had collected at gunpoint from them. Those were inarguably the wonders of Emefiele’s policy at play.

    So, the intentions behind the currency redesign were top-notch, patriotic and a precursor to the Nigerian golden era, and Mr Emefiele was on the verge of being voted Nigeria’s best CBN governor ever!

    However, there is a tragic turn of events as feelers from the streets rated the policy execution as a sheer disaster. Introspectively, the outcomes so far interrogate the competence of the managers of the CBN and further question its strategic function as the banks under it watch, had gone berserk and violated every instruction without immediate consequences.

    With the new notes sprayed at parties, gone back to the hands of gun-wielding terrorists, hawked on street corners, sold at bus-stop but is never available across banks’ counters or dispensed through the ATMs. Yet CBN is the bankers’ bank, and Mr Emefiele and his team could look Nigerians in the face whimpering and say, it is sabotage from the banks.

    With all the best brains at the CBN, the Emefiele team cannot manage the currency redesign and distribution project. Chai! Simply project management skills the young handlers of the EndSARS movement would have dispensed with near angelic precision.

    Presently, see what is going on at the bank and the impacts on society. For the first time, there is a massive uprising against a financial policy with the threat of mob action, women and men are stripping naked in banking halls in demand of their money, banks properties are vandalized; trade and small businesses are crumbling like pack of cards, stalls in the markets are shutting down causing panic across the country.

    So, the critical question is, did the managers of CBN interrogate all variables from the very point of conceptualization? Did the bank see through the tread and anticipate the possible consequences of not delivering this project seamlessly from take-off to finish? Were the new notes printed/minted enough to replace the intended mopped-up cash with a buffer for eventualities? Was the non-banking segment of the Nigerians in the rural areas factored into the plans? Were the number of bank branches and their capacities in the local communities considered?

    In light of the above, the verdict is incontrovertible because the CBN under Emefiele brings disrepute to the nation given the colossal waste of national resources spent for capacity-building programs and training budgets that run into billions of naira yearly yet managing a simple task as currency redesign and circulation is now rocket science. The CBN should cover its head in shame at this trying moment.

    Whether targeted at politicians or whoever, that is immaterial presently and does not seem to matter to suffering Nigerians any longer because no one will vote on an empty stomach or while nursing the wounds of a failed business. Sadly, what is on ground encourages politicians to buy votes cheaply because, with the scarcity of the naira in circulation, any hungry man can easily part with his voter’s card and survive with the N10,000 politicians are alleged to be throwing around.

    So, Mr Godwin Emefiele, it is imperative to let the public know the quantum of the new notes printed, the allocations to the banks across the board, and why the discrepancies or shortfalls in circulation. Or has it returned to the hands of politicians who have bank managers as their boys?

    It was surprising when a friend looked at me sternly and said, Emefiele looks like the Nigerian version of the Anti-Christ, but his assertion remains puzzling. Nothing Nigerians cannot spiritualize. And equally intriguing is another submission that, “who carries a dustbin on his head, gives open invitations to others to dump their dirt”.

    Emefiele and his team are rudderless and cannot appropriate the enormous powers of the CBN and its strategic roles to drive the right changes.

    A word is enough, and we hope, Godwin Emefiele will not go down in history as one of the most colourless CBN governors in the annals of central banking in Nigeria.

  • Naira: CBN Gov begs for understanding, to stop PoS charges

    Naira: CBN Gov begs for understanding, to stop PoS charges

    The Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mr Godwin Emefiele, has appealed to Nigerians to show understanding adding that the redesigned notes will circulate and be accessible.

    Emefiele made the appeal at a special media briefing on the new naira notes, on Friday, in Lagos.

    He noted he was seeing the protests and arguments surrounding the difficulty citizens were facing in accessing the new notes.

    ”I understand the agitation and I’m begging in God’s name, we on our knees begging people to please show understanding. They should be calm.

    ”In our meetings with the banks, we have told them to set up tents and chairs, give people numbers, which I’m sure some people will say it is old fashioned.

    ”But at this time that we’re trying to get the currency in circulation amongst everybody, people have to have numbers and they come in under a queueing arrangements that when you come in you get served, if it finishes, just be patient.

    ”By tomorrow, when you come back, they will start from where they stopped, you will not be cheated.

    ”Let’s just be calm and adopt a good queueing system, the assurance we give is that it will eventually go round.

    ”Eventually the limits will be raised and eventually the limits will be removed and people will be able to conduct their business transactions in a way that it has always been in the past,” Emefiele said.

    On high charges by the Point of Sale (PoS) agents on every transaction made by their customers, the apex bank governor urged banks to stop the charges on PoS.

    ”I am going to be calling a meeting with the banks this evening or by tomorrow, if those charges go to or those charges have been charged through the bank, we are going to have an arrangement with even telcos to see how those charges can actually at this time be stopped.

    ”Those charges at this time should be stopped. So, if we know whatever you are making that you’re not making because we stopped it, we can collect it somewhere and look for a way to pay you.

    ”But we don’t want you to continue to create pain on those who want to use alternative channels when they cannot have cash in their pocket.

    ”We will go into this later this night or even tomorrow, we’re going to call a meeting of both the banks and the mobile networks; at this time nobody should be charged, if you are charged, we will need to know about it.

    ”But we would want this service to continue to be offered. Whatever it is in terms of volume and number that you have carried out. We will look for away to pay you your money,” he said.

    The redesigned naira notes comprising N200, N500 and N1,000, came into use on Dec. 15, 2022, after they were unveiled by President Muhammadu Buhari on Nov. 23, 2022 in Abuja.

    The CBN had earlier fixed Jan. 31 as deadline for the collection of old naira notes, but later extended the time limit to Feb. 10.

    The CBN governor had said the extension was to allow Nigerians that had naira legitimately earned and trapped, the opportunity to deposit their money for exchange.

    The governor had ordered banks to load their Automated Teller Machines with the new naira notes to ensure Nigerians had access to them.

  • Naira Redesign has reduced Banditry, Kidnapping  – Emefiele

    Naira Redesign has reduced Banditry, Kidnapping – Emefiele

    Following the scarcity of new notes that has hit the nation as a result of Naira redesign, Godwin Emefiele, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, on Tuesday, appealed to lawmakers and Nigerians to demonstrate understanding, insisting that the apex bank was out to fight the incidence of insecurity in Nigeria.

    The CBN Governor, added that the kidnapping and bandity has greatly improved in the country due to Naira redesign.

    He stated this during the call in Abuja before the House of Representatives’ fact-finding ad hoc committee on the scarcity and the deadline for the old Naira notes.

    Emefiele urged those affected by the policy to bear with the apex bank, while urging Nigerians to comply with all directives.

    He said, “At this initial stage, there will be hitches, but it’s to make the Nigerian economy better and stronger.

    “The redesigned naira notes and CBN’s cashless policy has moderated inflation in the country and curtailed the activities of kidnappers and bandits.

    “Inflation is moderating, the exchange rate is stable, and we’re hoping that the naira can be stronger.”

  • New Naira Notes:  Who are the saboteurs: Bank MDs or CBN’s Emefiele? – By Mideno Bayagbon

    New Naira Notes: Who are the saboteurs: Bank MDs or CBN’s Emefiele? – By Mideno Bayagbon

    Today we are going to just skirt around a kaleidoscope of issues, a kind of look at the major trending issues of the past one week. The most current of these is the extension granted by the CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele, for the submission of the old Naira notes to the banks and the  coming into effect of the new Naira notes. Emefiele’s volte face, after he and the president had sworn that “no Jupiter” would make them consider an extension to the January 31st date, we are told, emanated from the President, Muhammadu Buhari, who under pressure from top politicians and some eminent Nigerians had to cave in.

    And it is a reasonable thing to do. Given that the process has seemingly been hijacked by the ubiquitous Nigerian factor, and our penchant for “last minute dot.com” it was almost like a fait accompli for the governing authorities to do the needful and extend the deadline.

    The major saboteurs of the current Naira redesign deadline appear to be the banks. Despite the claim by the CBN that they are well funded with the redesigned notes, they choose to complicate the process. They blatantly disobeyed the CBN who had asked that they stop stocking ATMs with the old notes. Rather they chose to make it a hellish experience for Nigerians who still have the old notes with them. The queues at the ATMs and banks were frighteningly long and skirmishes were beginning to entice frustrated Nigerians who wanted to beat the deadline. Then the extension announcement came. According to the CBN Governor, Emefiele, instead of the earlier January 31st deadline, ten days grace of February 10th, was the new date.

    The question cannot but be asked: why do we like complicating simple issues? Why can’t we get the simplest of things right? How much does the average Nigerian have stored at home or in some hidden locale that they can’t get the old notes exchanged for new within 100 days? As usual, the real culprit of the new policy are using the back door, sabotaging the system, and laughing all the way at the stupidity of policy makers and Nigerians. For them, there is always a solution, no matter how devious it is, to countermand any policy designed to checkmate their criminal excesses. They do know how to beat the system. This they have shown again and again. By the time the CBN finds time to do an audit of how much was returned to the banks as old notes, it will be clear that the smart Alecs, have once again rubbed excreta on all our faces.

    For me, I smell a huge racketeering rat; a syndicated compromise geared towards making illicit cash available to politicians through the back door to corrupt the looming elections. As we all know, most of the politicians, through corrupt practices, have amassed huge Naira war chests intended to fight the presidential, national and state elections. It is now plausible that they are in cahoots with the banks, some of whom they own, to make of no effect, the withdrawal of the old Naira notes.

    Another reason why the bank managing directors should be thoroughly investigated is the fact that while they claim their banks did not receive enough new notes from the Central Bank, syndicates across major cities in Nigeria have a surfeit of the new notes, which they undoubtedly got from the banks, in total disregard of the new withdrawal limits set by the authorities. This they now get their foot soldiers to sell in street corners while other big men who have also breached the system, with the active connivance of the bank MDs, spray in bundles at parties.

    As exclusively reported by TheNewsGuru.com, TNG, on Monday this week, even POS operators are forced to buy the new notes from the bank syndicates hence anyone who wants to collect the new notes from them must forfeit a punishing 10 percent of whatever amount they want to withdraw. So for an example, if you want to withdraw N20,000 you will only get N18000, with N2000 as cost.

    There is no other plausible explanation as to why the banks have baulked the orders, deliberately frustrated Nigerians who have over the last 100 days tried to exchange their old notes for new ones, only to get the same notes paid to them at the ATMs and even at the banks’ counters. As we all know, the candidate of the All Progressives Congress, APC has left no one in doubt that the policy was specifically targeted at him. He has not fully disclosed his reasons for this assertion but the federal government fell just short of saying it is a policy targeting the politicians who hope to buy their way through the elections. It euphemistically told the nation last week that it was Nigerian “big men” who are the targets. Nocturnal visits to Aso Rock by the candidates of the APC, PDP and others are said to be the last straw that truncated January 31st as the final deadline to return the old notes.

    ….SCARY NEWS FROM OSUN ELECTION TRIBUNAL

    The long awaited Osun Governorship Election Tribunal finally came out with a verdict which annulled the election of Senator Adeleke as Governor of Osun State. Sincerely, however, that is not the main news of the verdict. The devastating news, however, is the huge blow to the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, who have before now assured us that the BVAS system which it has introduced as the long awaited solution to election rigging and over voting in Nigeria. The Tribunal results show that BVAS can be compromised and over voting can still be perpetrated. In 700 units, in the Ede  and other electoral strongholds of the Adelekes, it was successfully shown that announced votes did not tally with BVAS. Unfortunately, if a proper forensic audit is done across the state, we may just find out that BVAS is still a long  way from our free and fair elections dream. INEC releasing two different sets of BVAS results for the election adds more scarce fuel to the electoral manipulation confusion. This holds dire consequences for the Presidential and other elections afoot.

    …..AND DSS HAS NOT ARRESTED THE ISLAMIC CLERIC

    Karl Marx, the renowned political theorist and socialist revolutionary, once noted that religion is the opium of the masses . And nowhere, globally, is this more true than in poverty ravaged Africa; especially so in Nigeria. As over 103 million Nigerians stew in the strangulating poverty brought on them by the incompetent Buhari government  currently grinding, mercifully, to an end, and there emerges the possibilities of resetting the button of governance, a little known Islamic cleric, in Kano, was trending all week where he was seen urging Moslem faithful not to consider voting for “infidels” meaning Peter Obi and other Christian politicians. Owning up to the attack on the Labour Party Presidential Candidate last week in Kano, he was full of venom and peddled so much hate speech it is a good thing all the major security apparatus are headed by Moslems appointed by the Moslem President Buhari. If they are not conniving and are in agreement with him, it is a miracle he is still walking about vomiting his hatred against those he considers as infidels?

  • Emefiele has weaponized CBN and is an enemy of democracy – FFK

    Emefiele has weaponized CBN and is an enemy of democracy – FFK

    The All Progressive Congress, Presidential Campaign Council, director of new media, and former minister of aviation, Femi Fani-Kayode (FFK), has described the governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Mr Godwin Emefiele, as an enemy of democracy.

    He made this known through his Twitter handle on Tuesday.

    Kayode noted that the policy of cancelling old notes must be stopped until after the election, and then done lawfully.

    His statement reads; ”Emefiele has weaponised the CBN and is an enemy of democracy.

    The policy of cancelling old notes must be totally cancelled until AFTER the election and then done lawfully.

    He wants to cause a crisis, provoke a people’s uprising, derail our democracy and pave the way for an ING.

    He has NO plans to release enough new naira notes any time soon.

    He wants to STARVE the people of cash and drive them to rage out of frustration.

    This is not about politics but about stoking up protest and revolution. This is subversion and destablisation.

    He must be stopped and caged!