Tag: Naira

  • CBN accepts culpability for chaos arising from Naira redesign

    CBN accepts culpability for chaos arising from Naira redesign

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has accepted culpability for the chaos arising from the redesign of the N200, N500 and N1000 banknotes and the resultant suffering Nigerians are faced with.

    Mr Folashodun Shonubi, CBN’s Deputy Governor in charge of Operations said the apex bank did not anticipate the resultant effects of the Naira redesign and cash withdrawal limits policies.

    Speaking at the 22nd fellowship conferment lecture and ceremony organised by the Nigerian Society of Engineers (NSE) in Abuja, Mr Shonubi acknowledged that there was an oversight.

    The lecture held on Thursday, February 9, 2023, was titled, ‘The intricacies of the naira redesign and its benefit to Nigerians’.

    “As you know, Nigerians are very ingenious. And we created a whole new line of business for people that we never envisaged.

    “An aspect of that is queuing, where you sell your position on the queue for money. Night crawling, where you wait till night, collect numerous cards from your friends and family and go to an ATM and empty them using different cards and then take the cash to sell.

    “So it’s been a bit stressful to be honest because we did not anticipate this kind of behaviour,” he said.

    However, Shonubi argued that numerous benefits have been achieved, including the retrieval of N2 trillion to the banking system since implementation commenced.

    He vowed that the CBN will do everything within its authority to ensure that it salvages the current situation and make the challenges become a thing of the past as soon as possible.

    Council of State gives CBN two options to address Naira scarcity

    Meanwhile, the Council of State has presented two options to the CBN with which to address the current shortage of Naira notes in the country.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the National Council of State asked the CBN to print more new notes or recirculate the old Naira notes to ease the current hardship being faced by Nigerians.

    However, the Council of State expressed support for the Naira redesign policy of the apex bank but stressed that the hardship on Nigerians was too much.

    Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami briefed State House reporters on the key issues after the Council of State meeting at the Presidential Villa, Abuja on Friday.

    According to Malami, the Council of State advised the CBN to urgently ensure the availability of Naira notes to douse tension and ameliorate the suffering of citizens across the country.

    “The two major resolutions that were driven by the deliberations of the Council are: one, that we are on course as far as the election is concerned and we are happy with the level of preparation by INEC and the institutions.

    “And then two, relating to the Naira redesign policy, the policy stands but the Council agreed that there is need for aggressive action on the part of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) as it relates to implementation of the policy by way of ensuring adequate provision being made with particular regards to the supply of the Naira in the system,” Malami said.

    While corroborating the comments made by the Attorney General, Gov. Darius Ishaku of Taraba State said the INEC and the Inspector General of Police both gave details of their level of preparedness for the 2023 election.

    He said the governor of the CBN gave details of the Naira redesign policy as well as the merits and demerits of the policy.

    “The Governor of the Central Bank briefed us on the monetary change and issues that have arisen relating to that across the whole States of the Federation.

    ”He gave us the merits of that policy that is being implemented.

    ”What took more time was the monetary issue because of the scarcity of money in circulation but generally the view is that principally the policy was accepted.

    “But the major issue is that of implementation. So many views were proffered particularly that the CBN governor should look into making sure that the new money is available in quantum.

    ”And there were suggestions too that if the new money is not enough or printing them could be difficult, the old currency could be recirculated or pumped into circulation to ease the tension particularly for the poor people in the society who will need a little money to buy their food or drugs on daily basis,” he said.

    Ishaku said all deliberations at the Council were advisory, but the president would take the final decision.

    Gov. Babajide Sanwo-Olu, who also briefed newsmen, assured that the president would take the right decision at the end of the day for the benefit of all Nigerians.

    “All we said or discussed were advisory and the president will retire back to his office and I think with all of this advice, the executive knows what to do as we move on.

    ”I’m sure the president will make his thoughts and views known to the nation,” he added.

    TNG reports present at the Council of State meeting are former presidents Goodluck Jonathan, Yakubu Gowon and Abdulsalami Abubakar, Olusegun Obasanjo, who joined the meeting virtually.

    Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof Mahmood Yakubu, the CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele, and the Inspector General of Police, Usman Baba were also present to brief the council.

    The Council of State is an organ of the Federal Government of Nigeria which advises the executive on key policy making.

    This would be the first Council of State meeting held in 2023, coming 14 days to the presidential elections and amid the twin crisis facing the economy: fuel scarcity and a cash crunch occasioned by the CBN’s Naira redesign policy.

  • Naira gains massively at forex markets amid scarcity

    Naira gains massively at forex markets amid scarcity

    A recent look at the Naira shows that it is now exchanged at 461.10 to the dollar at the Investors and Exporters window.

    The figure represented an appreciation by 0.02 per cent compared to the 461.17 it exchanged on Wednesday

    An exchange rate of N462 to the dollar was the highest rate recorded within the day’s trading before it settled at N461.10.

    According to data published on FMDQ website, where forex is officially traded, the domestic currency closed at N461.10 per $1 on Thursday. This implies a 0.02 per cent appreciation from N461.17 per $1 it traded in the previous session on Wednesday.

    The naira experienced an intraday high of N439.96 and slipped to a low of N462.00 per dollar before settling at N461.10 at the close of business Thursday.

    The naira sold for as low as 439.96 to the dollar within the day’s trading.

    On Thursday, a total of 40.24 million dollars was traded at the official Investors and Exporters Window.

    For online transactions, the dollar is exchanged at N750.00 per $1 for those who preferred online transfers in places like Abuja and Uyo.

    However, on Thursday, findings show that  the Bureau de change operators  changed dollar at N600/$1  in Lagos and Abuja.

    Business and economy analysts have continued to project that the Naira will gain more strength as a result of its scarcity amid new notes bedeviling the country.

     

  • Synergistic gaps between CBN and banks in Naira redesign – By Magnus Onyibe

    Synergistic gaps between CBN and banks in Naira redesign – By Magnus Onyibe

    With the recent discovery of caches of the redesigned naira notes with unbroken wrappers inside Automated Teller Machines,ATMs making it impossible for cash to be dispensed and revelations that stacks of redesigned naira notes are hidden behind old ones in bank vaults to prevent detection,it is a no brainer to reach the conclusion that Deposit Money Banks,DMBs are not working in synergy with the Central Bank of Nigeria,CBN for the desired delivery of smooth cut-over from old to the redesigned naira notes regime.

    And the suspected conspiracy of banks to sabotage the CBN in its Naira redesign policy may not be a deliberate plan of the umbrella body of bankers known as Bankers Committee which comprises of Chief Executive Officers ,CEOs of banks which meets with the leadership of CBN regularly.

    Rather,from my understanding of the issues,it is likely to be a perfidy being perpetrated by a very corrupt crop of people in the middle level cadre in the banking sub sector.

    To provide better insights and in order to drive my point home ,allow me first of all reference other perfidies that pervade the banking sector in Nigeria of which the same category of bank workers are the agent provocateur.

    Before the current redesigned naira notes saga,the biggest scandal that the CBN is associated with and which attracts the most odium to it is the opaque and complex process of allocating and disbursing Foreign Exchange, FX to those who need it.

    In the past,the scarcity of FX for manufacturers to import raw materials;the inability of those who need it to pay medical bills for healthcare abroad to obtain it; and the distress suffered by students that need FX to settle their school fees amongst others had been like magnetizing force for opprobrium to the CBN that is roundly blamed for the inaccessibility of FX to a vast majority of Nigerians.

    But as the events surrounding the current hoarding of the redesigned naira notes have revealed,we need not look any further for the culprit in the scarcity of FX than the rank and file of bankers.

    In my reckoning,the unavailability of FX to a vast majority of Nigerians is actually not so much about the lack of it,but it is in part caused by the inefficiencies in it’s distribution arising from the deliberate actions that bankers take to thwart the process of getting FX across to the end users.

    They do so by introducing all manners of bottlenecks that border on or amount to the type of unwholesome outcome that the hoarding of redesigned naira has just exposed.

    To cure the seemingly intractable FX malaise in the country,the CBN had made several attempts in the past to move the function from Bureau-De-Change to banks,back to the CBN and then back to banks again.

    Yet,the FX supply and demand activity in our country has remained an un-transparent and a very painful and distressing experience to a vast majority of Nigerians.

    Currently the function of FX disbursement to those in need of it reside in the banks and the process has even gone online. Yet,obtaining it for even Personal Travel Allowance and Business Travel Allowance,PTA/BTA is still a nightmare till date.

    After filling out the forms online and meeting all the conditions for obtaining a mere $4000/5000,your bank manager would lie that approval is being awaited from CBN. A few days thereafter,you are informed that CBN has denied approval.

    That is a big fat lie.

    It is the bank that has used your application to receive the allocation from the CBN.

    But instead of availing you of the FX by disbursing the cash to you,it decides to keep the hard currency which is ultimately sold to hawkers who offload the cash into the market at black market rate.

    It is such practices that are creating distortions in the economy and why the IMF and World have been urging the CBN to close the second FX window to reduce the market for buying and selling FX to
    a single one.

    On the occasions whereby your bank manager decides to be a bit kind,you are paid half of the $5000/$4000 allocated by the CBN which is $2500/ 2000 while the bank or the regional or branch manager keeps other half.

    It is the aggregate of the half of the approved sum for the applicant but of which only half is disbursed that are sold in the black market to manufacturers and importers of finished goods who desperately need the FX to import raw materials and food items because Nigeria remains a net importer of food even it has vast fertile land for agriculture.

    The above is the type of heist that has been going on in the FX market and the CBN is either turning a blind eye or has not been monitoring the transactions perhaps due to lack of capacity,negligence or both.

    As a direct consequence,Nigerians have been suffering untold hardships sometimes in foreign lands where they are detained in hospitals and hotels or thrown out of school for their inability to settle bills owing to lack of FX.

    To a large extent, it is the high cost of the fraudulently obtained FX sold to importers by crooked bank manager that is fueling inflation in our country.

    Since the entrepreneurs have to make profit ,the high cost of obtaining FX is passed via inflated price of goods and services to the already over burdened consumers. That is why a bag of rice that sold for N12,000 in 2015 currently sells for N50,000.

    What this simple street economics demonstrates is that the astronomically high rate of 21% inflation in the economy today has its origin in the roguish activities of middle level bankers catalogued above.

    And it is the current exposure of the ignoble role of bankers as the ones stopping the redesigned naira from getting to the end users that has revealed that it is the unscrupulous bankers that are partly responsible for the economic perils besetting the critical mass of our country men and women.

    That is not discounting the role of corrupt public servants who are the root of all the evils afflicting our country.

    As the nefarious activities of the category of bankers earlier referenced as clogs in the wheel of progress of our country has now been identified,the malfeasance needs to be addressed once and for all with the utmost urgency that it deserves.

    Readers are likely to wonder why the lack of access to FX by a vast majority of Nigerians who need it as highlighted above has not attained the type of crisis dimension that the current naira contrived shortage has precipitated even though it has been going on forever.

    The reason is simply because only about 10% of Nigerians are active users of FX.

    That is quite unlike the situation whereby 100% of Nigerians need naira to survive in the manner that humans need air to remain alive but they are currently being denied access to it,which is the driving force for the mayhem in banking halls by the masses who are at their wits end.

    And the calamity in the financial services sector is an existential threat that could result in the asphyxiation of the economy and unhinging of our country which is currently tottering on the brinks of a total collapse owing to a debilitating national debt in excess of N77 trillion.

    That in a nutshell is why remedial actions need to be taken urgently and rapidly.

    In fact,the current CBN governor Mr Godwin Emefiele had been accused by an ex-CBN governor of enriching a few powerful people in the corridors of power by allocating them FX at official rate which they ‘round trip’ or with which they engage in arbitrage to gain billions of naira by reselling the same allocations in the black market.

    Mr Emefiele now has the opportunity to redeem his image by introducing more transparency into FX distribution system in Nigeria.

    Even though the pre existing nefarious activities in the FX market and the current redesigned naira hoarding have caused the CBN and its governor, Mr Emefiele great pains,the apex financial regulatory authority has done little or nothing to aggressively address the identified policy gap and if you like,failure.

    Having exposed the roguery being carried out by some bankers and given the precarious situation in the country right now,the CBN governor and his team of security operatives that have swung into action to bring culprits to book by going round the banks examining the books, should go all the way to clean up the proverbial Augean stable,no matter whose ox is gored.

    That is the irreducible minimum action required to regain the confidence of Nigerians by the CBN and FGN.

    My point is that supervision and surveillance activities by the joint task force with security agencies has to be sustained.

    And consultants comprising of ex-bank inspectors who are skilled in forensic auditing as well as experienced ex-law enforcement officers should be engaged by CBN after the current exercise to continue doing the job.

    That is another way of creating private sector jobs for Nigerians and ensuring that the criminal elements in the banks do not go rogue again.

    For instance,Bank of Industry,BoI has a gamut of consultants comprising mainly of ex-staff that render services to businesses that want to obtain loans from it.

    It took NNPC the wisdom of engaging a former niger delta militant- Tompolo to carry out crude oil pipeline surveillance for the syndicate stealing our crude oil to be bursted.

    The CBN needs to adopt a similar measure to tame the monster of graft that has seized the banking sector.

    It is note worthy that the complicated process of FX transaction in the CBN which currently has two windows-official and parallel market rates is reminiscent of the import license days in Nigeria in the 1980s wherein a mere possession of import license made several people that had access to those in authority billionaires without lifting their fingers to do any work,but by having access to corrupt government officials empowered to issue the licenses.

    Following the continuous outcry by concerned Nigerians,the anomaly was corrected .

    The same can be achieved with FX transactions if enough efforts and critical thinking are invested by the CBN and FGN in trying to get it right.

    If readers do not mind my brief digression one more time from the naira redesign issue and the pains it is causing the hoi poloi ,it may be recalled that the same policy failure was prevalent in the oil/gas sector whereby oil blocks were randomly allocated to individuals and organizations with contacts in the corridors of power without following set down rules.

    That impropriety made a few Nigerians multi billionaires after they sold off their arbitrarily allocated oil blocks or jointly developed them with foreign partners,even as the rest of Nigerians who are joint owners of the oil/gas assets,(especially host communities) were left to suffer the consequences of associated environmental hazards from oil/gas exploration.

    But that arbitrariness is now a thing of the past that happened during military era as oil blocks are currently only allocated via competitive bidding.

    What the scenario described above demonstrates is that our country had been bedeviled by inequitable and inefficient distribution of our common wealth or resources.

    And the culprit is not lack of laws or rules, but the none or weak enforcement of applicable laws of the land which are designed to prevent the abuse of laid down procedures and processes.

    It it is when the laws or rules are being broken without consequences to the violators as has been the case with those engaging in rounding tripping of FX and the redesigned naira with huge profits and who are being allowed to get away with the crime,that the economy suffers and Nigerians sink further in misery.

    Graft which has made our country take over from India as the poverty capital of the world must not be allowed to thrive or persist.

    In any case ,with the contraventions of the rules or laws pervading the whole gamut of public and private sectors in our country,the masses are definitely at their wits end.

    And if the melodramas that unfolded in banking halls last week,ranging from women and men stripping themselves naked in expression of their desperate need for money is anything to go by, it may not take too long for Nigerians to say enough is enough.

    In fact,the general elections coming up in in less than three weeks is an opportunity for Nigerians to pay back their leaders that have dragged them into financial mess currently suffocating the hapless masses by voting them out of power.

    For so long,it has been wrongly believed that corruption only prevails in the public sector and the private sector is corruption free.

    That is a fallacy because the type of perfidy that the Naira redesign crises has exposed is a serious form of graft in the banks which are private sector concerns that should not be glossed over.

    But since corruption in the private sector is not the primary focus of this discourse,l will dwell further on it in subsequent media interventions.

    For now,let us concentrate on the current case of hoarding the redesigned naira by the rank and file of the banking sector.

    Apparently, not much has been done by the relevant authorities to get to the root cause of the very unpalatable experience of FX users in the hands of bankers with a view to relieving them of the hardships that they go through to obtain it.

    Hence our country is in the current bind with naira similarly being hoarded by bankers.

    In my view,the organized private sector, particularly Manufacturers Association of Nigerian,MAN has not done enough in that respect to compel CBN to provide less pernicious and more transparent ways to gaining access to FX from the apex bank.

    For instance, there is nothing wrong with the CBN setting up a committee to give direction in the management of FX disbursement with a representative each from MAN,Association of Universities Unions,ASUU and Nigerian Union of Journalists,NUJ or Guild of Editors just to give the process a bit of transparency and restore public confidence which has taken flight from the CBN.

    The Nigerian extractive industry did it and it gave the agency in charge of accountability in the oil /gas sector more credibility.

    Probably,if proper supervision and thorough investigations had been carried out by perhaps the CBN,Bankers Committee,Chartered Institute of Bankers,ClBN and even Ministry of Finance Incorporated (MoFl) (recently inaugurated) maybe the virus of corruption that seems to have become interred in the marrows of bankers might have been eliminated by now.

    And the current corrupt actions of hoarding the redesigned naira currencies might not have arisen.

    To be clear ,when l am talking about bankers being the agent provocateurs in the hoarding of the redesigned currencies,l am not referring to the top executives like Managing or Executive Directors.

    But l am focusing on middle level managers like heads of branches and those incharge of operations and involved in cash management as well as regional heads too.

    Frankly,I recognize that this perspective is not a main stream one as most commentators are more inclined towards blaming Federal Government of Nigeria , FGN and CBN for changing the design of the naira and the timing of it which they believe is wrong.

    But l prefer to take a deeper dive on the crisis in the financial services sector by leveraging a different template for assessing the issues surrounding the exercise from a more broad and wholistic Point of View,POV.

    In the first instance,l agree with the reasons that the CBN has laid out for embarking on the redesign of the higher denominations -N100,N200,N500 and N1,000 bills which are largely altruistic despite the negative intentions which those that oppose it are insinuating.

    According to Emefiele, “currency management by CBN has
faced a number of challenges for some time now. This includes: Significant
hoarding of banknotes by members of the public, with statistics showing that over
80% of currency in circulation are outside the vaults of Deposit money banks. At
the end of September 2022, available data at the CBN indicate that N2.73 trillion
out of the N3.23 trillion currency in circulation, was outside the vaults of Deposit money banks across the country; and supposedly held by the public. This is an indicative that Nigerians have not fully accepted the cashless policy of the Central Bank”.

    That is on top of the need to make Nigeria a cashless economy and combat kidnappers that receive ransom payments in cash and who have been stockpiling them in their hideouts,as such keeping a lot of cash outside the banking system.

    The naira redesign which Emefiele says has as at 31 January already compelled a return of nearly N2 trillion of the N3.2 trillion believed to have been outside the system,validates the need to take the action.

    In other words,the exercise is on track to realizing the set objective,if 75% success has already been achieved.

    The United Kingdom which is home to London, one of the foremost financial capitals of the world and a country which is our former colonizer,as well as India,the largest democracy in the world also recently redesigned or replaced their currencies with new ones.

    Like Nigerians,citizens of both countries also suffered huge inconveniences-particularly India.

    Allow me share a portion of a report of the experience of someone from one of the aforementioned jurisdictions when the high denominations of their currencies were changed.

    A perspective on the outcome of the demonetization policy in India by Deepa Khrishnan who published her report in strategy + business(a publication of PWC) is enlightening but it was written soon after the exercise and some of her conclusions have been overtaken by events.

    Khrushnan is not only a researcher, she is also an entrepreneur and teaches at S.P Jain Institute of Management and Research in Mumbai,lndia.

    Here we go:

    “On the night of Nov. 8, 2016, there was a surprise announcement on Indian television. In a live telecast to the nation, 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 demonetization by the press, was planned in secrecy and announced dramatically, 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 economic shock of this scale. The withdrawn notes, amounting to US$320 billion at the time, represented 86 percent of the total currency value in circulation in India. By making the notes worthless almost overnight, the government hoped to destroy large piles of black money hidden away by tax evaders. In addition, the government claimed the plan would strike a major blow against corruption and counterfeiting and would kick-start India’s transition into a digital, cashless world. In a country with a huge informal economy, dependent on cash transactions, demonetization was a big political gamble, too”.

    That is not all.

    The report was concluded with a dire warning for other countries that may be contemplating currency change or demonetization as it was characterized in India.

    According to Krishnan who is also a social worker:

    “The immediate fallout was chaos, as the country scrambled to cope. There was a rush at banks and ATMs to exchange old notes and withdraw new currency. Queues at banks grew; many people suffered, especially the poor, who had no access to credit cards or mobile wallets; and dozens of deaths resulting from the crisis were reported.

    “Two years later, the dust has settled, and it has become obvious that demonetization was not the resounding success the government expected it to be. India’s black money problem has not gone away. The economy has taken a beating, huge financial losses have been incurred, and the marginalized poor, least able to withstand adversity, have been negatively affected. There have been some gains in tax collections, and the country has progressed toward digital payments, but these advances could have been achieved through other, less drastic means.

    “For countries tackling black money or promoting a cashless economy, India’s experience with demonetization provides rich lessons. Although the long-term social, economic, and political consequences of demonetization are still playing out in India, answers to many complex questions are now apparent”.

    Dear readers, you would agree with me that the current events in Nigeria echo the Indian experience in 2016 in many ways.

    Apparently, the Nigerian authorities did not learn from the Indians.

    But even if they did,the motive in Nigeria is slightly different because there is also the mission of stalling buying of votes by unscrupulous politicians that had allegedly been stockpiling money to snatch victory at the polls by hook or crook.

    In the United Kingdom, UK £20 and £50 notes also seized to be legal tender from the end of September last year as a counter measure to counterfeiting which is one of the reasons that Mr Emefiele advanced for the redesign of the higher denomination currencies-N100, N200, N500, N1000.

    That means currency redesign is not peculiar to Nigeria and the motive is altruistic.

    Obviously,the exercise in the UK was not as chaotic as it was in India and it was definitely not as bad as the experience in Nigeria is turning out.

    Nevertheless,one thing that is clear is that the motive for demonization or currency redesign in all the three countries of India, Uk and Nigeria appear to be the same, except the fact that ours is happening close to a consequential general election and it is also aimed at reining in kidnapping and pulling from the dark world the illicit money used for ransom payments.

    So,the fact that the socioeconomic, cultural and political dynamics in the three countries are different makes the case of Nigeria even more unique.

    And even if the other goals of eliminating counterfeiting,making our economy cashless and pulling money from the black market into the banking system are not achieved in our clime,the alleged intention of starving politicians of funds with which they could have subverted the will of the people via votes buying as alleged in some quarters seem to be coming to fruition as the inability of political demagogues to draw cash from across the counter in banks and ATMs has thwarted the unholy intentions of unscrupulous politicians.

    At least the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress,APC, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu has alleged that the starving of the economy of cash is aimed at ruining his chance at winning the 25 February presidential polls,vowing that he would win anyway. And Nasir El Rufai,kaduna state governor has also weighed in by stating that the naira redesign at this point in time is in bad taste and against the interest of the ruling APC and laid the blame on Aso Rock Villa ‘mafia’.

    His allegations were validated by the First Lady of Nigeria,Mrs Aisha Buhari who shares El Rufai’s sentiments.

    Obviously, the Naira redesign policy has become a political talking point with APC and PDP campaigns exchanging vitriolic on the matter.

    With APC Presidential standard bearer and party accusing elements in Aso Rock Villa ,the presidential seat of power of sabotage,there appears to be a situation of ‘a house divided can not stand’ in the ruling party’s stable.

    Contrary to the reported APC resentment towards Aso Rock Villa and president Buhari ,the PDP and her presidential candidate, Wazirin Atiku Abubakar had (ahead of all the other candidates) actually made a passionate appeal to president Buhari and CBN to extend the deadline from 31 January to ease the suffering of the critical mass of Nigerians who the exercise had severely handicapped.

    He made the plea alongside similar requests by legislators and other well meaning Nigerian leaders.

    And their plea was graciously granted by president Buhari and Emefiele who extended the deadline by ten (10) days- 10 February which is exactly 15 days to 25 February D-Day for Presidential election.
    Below is how the former vice president and PDP flag bearer after the extension of the deadline from 31 January to 10 February consoled and counseled long suffering Nigerians:

    “The cashless policy and reduction of the cash in circulation has many advantages and every patriotic Nigerian should support the CBN on this. It will help to reduce the flow of illicit funds in our economy. It will help to defeat the funding of terrorism and deter the circulation of drug money in our economy. It will help our fight against corruption.”

    All things being equal,the ten (10) days respite would yield significant benefits to the distressed people of Nigeria who can not wait to put the current miserable experience behind them as soon as PDP and her presidential standard bearer berth in Aso Rock Villa after 25 February polls.

    Although,the banking sector is one of the most regulated all over the world,the focus of the regulators in Nigeria appear to be mainly on auditing of accounts to avoid staff defrauding the banks.

    There seems to be less focus on compliance with BOFID/BOFIA by the banks.

    Invariably,not much had been done about monitoring other activities of the banks including Automated Teller Machines, ATMs and mobile money agents like Point Of Sale,P.O.S operators etc.

    Recently,there was a report of the murder of a P.O.S operator arising from schemes that went sour between syndicates or rackets in the banking sector.

    And l am yet to read or hear of a thorough investigation into the matter with a view to unraveling and and eliminating the cause or causes of the crime if it is established that bankers are engaging in unwholesome practices that are inimical to the best interest of Nigerian masses.

    The fact that the thieving managers are not stealing bank’s money directly but robbing members of the public via all manners of antics does not justify bank executives turning blind eyes to the nefarious activities of their middle level managers who also pinch customers money via manipulation of withdrawals via ATMs that customers often complain about and more often than not,banks fail to attend to the issues at branch levels.

    Of all the skits being produced by Nigerians with very fertile imaginations in parody of the national calamity of scarcity of the redesigned notes,the one that took the mickey out of me is the one about a P.O.S operator that was openly making enquiries about the price of a new house because she had made enough money in this season to want to purchase three with cash at once.

    The parody clearly suggests that Nigerians suspect that P.O.S operators are milking them dry.

    And I understand that the current modus operandi is that P.O.S operators demand and receive N2000 of every N10,000 that they pay out.

    That is a whooping 20% profit given the fact that withdrawing N10,000 from an ATM may not attract any charge.

    With the chance of gaining N2,000 on every N10,000, calculate how much a bank branch manager would make,if he or she is allocated N100m for his/her branch in one week.

    After doing so,readers can figure out the incentive for the hoarding of the redesigned currencies being perpetrated by bankers to the detriment of Nigerian banking public.

    There is another reason the demand for the new currencies is high.

    At every big party held across the country, especially the traditional ones,the abuse of the naira,known as ‘spraying’ is always the highlight of the parties.

    The reason for that is the phenomenon of musicians always calling out the names of society big names now known as celebrities for praise.

    Back in the days it was musicians like juju music maestros Sunny Ade and Ebenezer Obey in Yoruba land and Osita Osadebe as well Oliver De Coque in lgbo land that baited the money bags with praise songs which motivated them to enter the dancing floor to ‘spray’ money on the musicians and the celebrants or dancers in the circle that they fancied.

    The phenomenon was relatively unknown in the northern flanks of the country until recently.

    Prior to the current development the cost of crisp notes for spraying at parties was about 10% more than the value of old naira notes.

    That means that if you give money changers at parties N100,000,they would give you N90,000 in exchange.

    My wife shared with me an experience of how she rejected such a proposition by new money hawkers at a wedding party that she attended recently. She said she opted to spray the celebrants with the old notes that she had budgeted than exchange it for 10% less for new notes which could have denied the celebrant of 10% of the value of the money she planned to ‘spray’ owing to the avarice of bankers and their agents selling crisp currency notes at parties.

    Arising from the above, the issue of selling new naira notes boils down to the demand for it.

    As we all learnt from elementary economics, without demand,there would be no supply.

    The two instances of how hefty charges by P.O.S operators and high profit margins for changing old notes to new ones by money sellers at parties which are driving the demand for the redesigned currencies are examples of the trouble in the financial services sector.

    Those are the reasons there is less money in ATMs and more in the hands of P.O.S operators and redesigned currency sellers at parties.

    It is a no brainer in figuring out that anything that is not effectively monitored would be abused.

    So,the strategy should be to rein in the triggers for demand so that the supply can stop.

    Why the CBN had failed to put in place strict monitoring controls for P.O.S operations to avoid the exploitation of patrons and also enforce the law against the abuse of naira in the manner that our national currency is trampled on at parties as earlier highlighted,beats me.

    With the current fiasco,the apex financial institution seems to have woken up from slumber.

    And it was about time that the authorities started enforcing section 21(5) of the CBN Act, 2007 which makes the abuse of the naira a punishable offense. Although it has always been in our statutes books,it had remained unenforced until the current arrests being made by the law enforcement authorities particularly with respect to the exhibitionism of spraying money at parties.

    Undoubtedly,it is a malady that has transformed into a scourge in Nigeria that is fueling the hoarding of the naira as bankers sell it at premium prices to those who love to show off at parties by pasting currencies on celebrants in a vulgar display of wealth thereby preventing the redesigned money from getting to the masses which is causing pains and anguish currently being endured by the masses.
    Based on media reports,some offenders have been taken into custody in the past few days.

    That is great.

    But is it not telling that it has taken a combined effort of CBN officials,ICPC, EFCC, and DSS operatives who are going from bank to bank to check bank records to discover the perfidious actions of bankers such as hiding new notes behind the old ones and loading ATMs with the redesigned currencies with the cellophane wrappers on them to prevent the machines from dispensing funds to patrons which is why the redesigned notes are not in the hands of the masses?

    The truth is that any activity that is not regularly monitored for compliance would be abused.

    If readers would permit me to digress one more time,it is the lack of effective monitoring for compliance that is also responsible for the unacceptable frequency of building collapse that is currently afflicting our country like a bad plague,all the way from lagos where scores died in a multiple stories building collapse last year to the recent tragedy in Abuja.

    It is also the lack of monitoring of crude oil pipelines by NNPC and relevant authorities to ensure that they are not breached by crude oil thieves (international criminal syndicates) that is equally responsible for our country’s inability to meet its OPEC allocated quota of 1.9m barrels a day.

    It may be recalled that our government was unable to pay workers salaries without borrowing from the banks owing to the paucity of FX accruing into the treasury.

    And the crude oil theft resulted in shortage of FX income into the CBN as crude oil export was drastically reduced until the responsibility of protecting the pipelines was contracted to Tompolo’s security firm that engages in pipelines surveillance.

    Subsequently, the firm bursted the criminal gangs siphoning-off the crude oil from the export pipelines and helped NNPC and FGN stem the hemorrhage.

    Another sector that lacked proper governance was petroleum retail sales.

    The consequence of which was the sale of adulterated petrol that was damaging vehicle engines not long ago.

    That became the excuse for the NNPC becoming the sole importer of petrol into the country as it was believed that lack of monitoring of the quality of the products being imported into our country was the reason adulterated products found their way into our market.

    Also,it is the same lack of monitoring for compliance that was responsible for the series of tragic air disasters that had taken hold in Nigerian airspace resulting in aircrafts full of passengers literally falling off from the skies. Not until enforcement was stepped up,did sanity return to our airspace and aviation sector.

    I had to cast my mind back into the past to recall some of the under listed economic and social activities in our beleaguered country that had gone awry due to failure by relevant agencies of government to monitor or engage in surveillance or supervision in order to ensure compliance with set down rules and procedures to underscore the fact that impunity is the rule rather than the exception in our clime.

    So,the bane of our country is the challenge of both operators and regulators not playing by the rules.
    And the bottom line is that without monitoring for compliance there will be laxity in the administration of any function which often times would boil down to the abuse of the system.

    Circling back to the ongoing ruckus in the financial services sector which is a fall out of CBN not holding banks accountable for poor service delivery to customers particularly with respect to FX ,ATM and P.O.S services which has been laid bare by the naira redesign exercise,hard lessons must have been learnt and the loopholes must be fixed.

    If the CBN was working in tandem with banks synergistically and enough workshopping was carried out by both parties to brainstorm and identify potential challenges that laid ahead in redistributing the redesigned currencies before the implementation of the policy, perhaps the absurdities going on in banking halls could have been avoided.

    Thankfully the CBN,Banks and security agencies appear to have closed the gap between them by closing their ranks in pursuit of economic saboteurs working against the attainment of the status of cashless society in our beloved Nigeria.

    Hopefully,the extraordinary measures taken by some banks to keep their branches open last Saturday and Sunday to attend to customers after the CBN approval for a maximum of N20,000 of the redesigned notes to be paid across the counter to customers would ease the pressure on ATMs and even online banking platforms that have been dysfunctional perhaps because they have crashed as a result of the unusually high traffic.

    As the race towards changing our political leadership approaches the finishing lines,the presidential candidate that would be the first to brace the tape already has his job cut out for him.

    And a good part of that job would be to implement and monitor for enforcement rules that have already been laid out for effective administration of our country,but currently being ignored or neglected by incumbent rulers,hence the nation has remained in the doldrums.

    By all indications,former vice president Atiku Abubakar who is the presidential candidate of the main opposition PDP, having previously been on the job as number two in the pecking order appear poised to pick up the trophy based on the broad base of his supporters stretching all the way from the North-east, North-west to North-central and South-west,to South-south as well as South east.

    In my reckoning,the fact that Wazirin Atiku Abubakar’s voters base cuts across ethnic and religious divides in the country puts him in a pole position to defeat his opponents come 25 February.
    In light of the fact that we practically run our lives, our country and indeed the world on social media these days,l would like to conclude with a cheeky social media post that l recently came across and which l feel is very striking:

    “What if after depositing all our old notes into our accounts and on 10th (February) Buhari now says all the money in everybody’s account will be used to pay Nigeria’s debt.What will you do?”

    I have no doubt that there would be answers to that mischievous question as much as sand on bar beach, lagos.

     

    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, please visit www.magnum.ng

  • Why new Naira notes are scarce – CBN

    Why new Naira notes are scarce – CBN

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has attributed hoarding of the new Naira notes as being responsible for its scarcity, and not that small quantity was issued out.

    The CBN Director, Consumer Protection, Mrs Rashidat Mongunu, said this on Thursday while monitoring microfinance banks in Offa, Offa Local Government Area of Kwara.

    The monitoring team first paid homage to the Olofa of Offa, Oba Mufutau Gbadamosi, before heading to Stockcorp Microfinance and Ibolo Microfinance banks.

    She said the redesigned notes were already made available by the CBN, but it is those hoarding it that make it scarce and people now throng banks to collect money almost at the same time.

    ”Because of the attitude of some Nigerians in hoarding the money, even those that don’t really need the money are rushing to get it and keep, not to spend.

    ”Currency management is a cycle but we have not allowed the cycle to mature, because when you issue out currency as CBN, what we expect is that the Naira issued out will come back into the banking system again.

    ”But now, everybody collecting the Naira is hoarding it. So, no matter how much Naira we put out there, if we continue with this attitude and the CBN issue from now till December, it will still not be enough.

    ”And you know that in every economy, you must have a proper accountability on the indent.

    ”You just don’t issue out Naira for the fun of it, you issue the amount that is commensurate with the level of activity you have in that country,” Mongunu said.

    The CBN director added that the situation could only get better when people started spending money already hoarded because enough money was already in circulation.

    ”There is Naira out there.  I have been in Kwara for over three weeks and we have been allocating money daily.

    ”The truth is that if the currency is circulating the way it should and not being hoarded, we shouldn’t have a problem.

    ”The only thing is for us to change our attitude because it can only get better when people start spending the money they have hoarded,” Mongunu stressed.

    She added that the CBN was already engaging traditional rulers to sensitise their people to have a positive attitude and be confident that the Naira redesign policy was not to punish anyone but to better the economy.

    Responding, the traditional ruler said the extension of the legality of the old notes from Jan. 31 to Feb. 10 was responsible for the problems people are facing currently.

    He said people had already deposited all that they have on Jan. 30 in anticipation to start spending the new notes on Feb. 1, hoping that it will be available, but it’s not so.

    Oba Gbadamosi however advised that if the CBN wants the policy to be received with open arms and successful, it should make the new notes available for people to spend.

    Currency swap exercise by staff of Stockcorp Microfinance bank.

  • NLC elects new excos, gives FG two weeks to end fuel queues

    NLC elects new excos, gives FG two weeks to end fuel queues

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) on Wednesday swore-in new executives, with Mr Joe Ajaero as the new president to lead the workers for the next four years.

    Ajaero, former General Secretary of the National Union of Electricity Union, was voted on consensus at the 13th NLC’s National Delegates Conference in Abuja.

    Ajaero took over the NLC leadership from Ayuba Wabba, who served between 2015 and 2023.

    In his acceptance speech, the new NLC president said that the executives were committed to pursuing the interest and desires of workers and the entire Nigerians.

    He promised that his leadership would speak for the millions of Nigerians and also seek a platform to lift them out of poverty.

    ”We, therefore, pledge our loyalty to the NLC, workers, the Nigerian people and the country. Our thoughts and actions shall be propelled by this avowal,” he said.

    He said that his leadership would pursue a new national minimum wage law that would take into consideration the objective reality of the socio-economic situation, and expand its reach to capture more workers.

    According to him, the wage review law will be sought through the national labour advisory council, to ensure that all loopholes exploited by workplace partners to restrict the efforts of making workplaces more decent compliance are blocked.

    ”We urge all employers of labour who have unsettled issues with their workers and unions to immediately resolve them to avoid our intervention,” he said.

    Ajaero urged the government to review the privatisation policy on electricity sector as it was mired in corruption.

    Other members of the executive include Prince Adewale Adeyanju, Deputy National President; Mr Audu Amber, 2nd Deputy National President; Mr Kabiru Sani, also a National Deputy President.

    Ambali Olatunji was elected the National Treasurer; Benjamin Anthony, Vice President; Mr Steve Okoro, Vice President; Mr Michael Nnachi, Vice President; Mr Olawole Sunday, Vice President; Mr Marwan Adamu, Financial Secretary.

    Others are, Mr Williams Akporeha, National Trustee; and three Internal Auditors, Mr Babatunde Olatunji, Mr Mohammed Ibrahim and Haruna Ibrahim; as well as two ex-officio members.

    Fuel: Ajaero urges FG to end queue in 2 weeks

    Meanwhile, the newly-elected President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Mr Joe Ajaero, has urged the Federal Government to find a lasting solution to persistent fuel queues to avoid industrial action.

    Ajaero made the call on Wednesday while addressing workers at the 13th NLC National Delegates Conference in Abuja.

    He said that the government had two weeks to address the ongoing fuel scarcity to avoid reaction from organised labour.

    According to him, Nigerians suffer and queue to get fuel and that should not be.

    ”We will definitely not keep quiet in the face of this deliberate defilement of citizenship by the ruling elites as we may mobilise across the nation to nudge the government to act more responsibly towards the citizenry.

    ”We will also seek ways of alleviating the suffering that currently walks our streets with arrogance,” he said.

    On election, the NLC leader said that politicians should play according to the rules and avoid actions that could truncate the democratic process and imperil the nation.

    He said that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) should ensure a transparent and equitable conduct of the elections at all levels, adding that Nigerians should also seize the opportunity to vote the right people into positions of power.

    ”Those that are destroying our nation and stealing our collective patrimony must not be allowed any longer in our corridors of power.

    ”As Nigerians, we must not allow them divide us along religious and regional lines. Our demands on the Nigerian State are basically the same.

    ”We are only asking for a secure nation where we can move freely and carry out our daily activities without violently losing our lives and properties.

    ”We have demanded equity and fairness in the sharing of our nation’s resources, functional and accessible education system for our children.

    ”That is increasing access to quality medical care, quality roads, increasing access to nutrition and generally elevating the factors that increase human wellbeing,” he said.

    Ajaero, therefore, advised the people to vote the candidates who have the competence and character to deliver on these demands in February and March.

  • Tinubu reacts to Supreme Court ruling on Naira notes

    Tinubu reacts to Supreme Court ruling on Naira notes

    Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, APC presidential candidate, says the Supreme Court ruling on the implication of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) re-designed naira notes and cashless policy has saved Nigeria from political and economic shutdown.

    Tinubu in a statement issued by Mr Bayo Onanuga, Director, Media and Publicity, APC Presidential Campaign Council (PCC) on Wednesday in Abuja, said the policy had subjected the masses to pains.

    He hailed the 36 state governors, especially the progressive APC governors, for standing on the side of Nigerians over the policy.

    According to the former two-term Lagos State governor, Nigerians were bearing the brunt of the policy because it was poorly implemented.

    The Supreme Court in a law suit brought before it by the governments of Zamfara, Kogi and Kaduna States gave an interim injunction against the CBN and Federal Government.

    The state governments had asked that the old N200, N500 and N1,000 naira notes remain legal tender beyond the CBN Feb. 10 deadline for the swapping of the old naira notes until the case is fully disposed.

    Tinubu said the governors, especially APC governors who instituted the suit against the CBN and Federal Government at the Supreme Court, acted well on behalf of hapless Nigerians.

    “The governors have saved the country from a needless political and economic crises and miseries.

    “This have clearly become the unintended consequences of the monetary policy of the apex bank,” the statement quoted Tinubu as saying.

    He noted that the Supreme Court ruling coincided with the advisory of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), urging for the extension of the deadline for the swap of the old naira notes.

    This, he said, was going by the problems being experienced across the country in getting the new naira notes.

    Tinubu applauded the courage of the governors, saying they acted to save the country from avoidable dangerous political crises and social unrest which the policy had brought on Nigerians.

    “Our country was dangerously careering toward anarchy and political and economic shutdown.

    “But with the Supreme Court interim ruling, our country has been pulled back from the precipices.

    “We thank our Supreme Court Justices for ruling wisely on the side of the people who have been subjected to undue agony and pains since this policy was announced,” Tinubu said.

    He added that the Federal Government and relevant stakeholders could now work out better framework on how to proceed with the new policy without causing any social and economic disruption and inconvenience to Nigerians.

    He noted that there were examples of other countries that had successfully and seamlessly changed their currencies to learn from.

    He said such countries gave a long time, at least 12 months to effect the currency change, adding that:” they do not engage in CBN-like Fire Brigade approach.

    “We have seen how a good policy can be poorly implemented to cause unintended problems for the people who should be the beneficiaries.

    “While lessons have been learnt, we must now move on as a country and people with a renewed hope for a better tomorrow.

    “The sole aim of my running to be the president of our country is to make life better and more abundant for our people and this is an ideal for which I will remain eternally committed to,” Tinubu stressed.

    He called on the CBN to ensure that the Supreme Court ruling was effectively executed by taking all necessary steps.

    This, he said, should include ensuring sufficient availability of naira notes whether old or new and properly sensitising the public to the ruling and the consequent validity of old notes

  • Disobey Supreme Court order on naira notes, risk contempt, SAN tells CBN

    Disobey Supreme Court order on naira notes, risk contempt, SAN tells CBN

    A Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Mr. Richard Ogunwole, on Wednesday, advised the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to abide by the Supreme Court’s temporary order halting the move by the Federal Government to ban the use of old naira notes from Feb. 10.

    Ogunwole, who gave the advice in an interview with NAN in Ibadan, said that the Supreme Court’s decision remained final and must be followed by all, irrespective of status or position.

    “There is nobody in Nigeria today who is not feeling the harsh economic policy of CBN.

    “We lawyers even find it difficult going to court because we also need money to transport ourselves there. It is the same situation for people from other professions.

    “My advice to CBN, the federal government and the commercial banks is to abide by the order or risk contempt of court,” Ogunwole said.

    However, a human rights activist, Mr Femi Aborisade, said that the apex court had only allowed itself to be used by politicians by granting such an order.

    Aborisade told NAN that the critical problem was not the extension of the Feb. 10 deadline for the old naira notes to cease to be legal tender, but the availability of new notes.

    “The essence of the extension is to serve as a relief to the generality of Nigerians,” said the legal practitioner.

    Aborisade expressed doubt on whether the Supreme Court had jurisdiction on a matter like naira redesign by CBN.

    The apex court had given an interim injunction restraining the federal government, CBN, commercial banks and others from implementing the Feb. 10 deadline for the old N200, N500 and N1000 to stop being legal tender.

    The court held that they must not continue with the deadline, pending the hearing of the main suit on Feb. 15.

    NAN also reports that the case was instituted by Kaduna, Kogi and Zamfara states.

  • Ondo APC suspends campaign

    Ondo APC suspends campaign

    The Ondo State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has ordered the immediate suspension of its campaign activities in the state over the current scarcity of fuel and new naira notes.

    Mr Ade Adetimehin, the state chairman of the party, in a statement on Wednesday in Akure, explained that the decision was in sympathy with residents of the state.

    “The party has, therefore, directed chairmen, and Directors-General at all levels, within the chapter, to suspend rallies, in sympathy with our people,” Adetimehin said.

    The chairman expressed regrets that the country was experiencing unusual shortage of petrol and scarcity of the new naira notes few weeks to “an all-important general election.”

    He argued that the people of the state had the right to be angry, and express same over the unfortunate development, but urged them to do so as “patriots that believed in a better tomorrow.”

    “As a party, we identify with our people at this unpleasant period. We agree they are exercising their rights, but we urge them to do so with measure of restraints.

    “Our strong believe is that this time shall fade soon,” he added.

    He commended the efforts of the Gov. Rotimi Akeredolu-led administration to ameliorate the harsh situation and ensuring the security of residents of the state.

    Adetimehin called on chieftains and members of the party to show more understanding and identify with those in their various localities to ease the tension.

  • New Naira notes worth N258m found hidden in Sterling Bank office

    New Naira notes worth N258m found hidden in Sterling Bank office

    New Naira notes worth N258 million have been found hidden in the head office of Sterling Bank in Abuja, the federal capital territory (FCT).

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) found the hidden Naira notes.

    In a statement, the ICPC disclosed that the N258 million worth of new banknotes were stashed in the vault of the head office of Sterling Bank.

    This discovery followed one of ICPC’s operations at ensuring that commercial banks and other interest groups do not flout the directive of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) for the release of new Naira notes to the general public.

    “When the ICPC monitoring team visited the bank and discovered the stashed new Naira notes in the bank’s vault, it was informed that the cash was the remnant of what the CBN had given the bank for onward distribution to its branches.

    “The team however found out that only the sum of Five Million Naira (N5m) each was distributed to their various branches.

    “Both the Regional and Service managers were arrested and later granted administrative bail while investigation continues,” the statement reads.

    In a similar vein, the Commission has effected the arrest of the Head of Operations, Keystone Bank, Mararaba in Nasarawa State for frustrating its customers at getting the new Naira notes.

    The ICPC team, while on its routine operation, found out that the Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) at the branch were not dispensing to its customers, while other bank customers were accessing only One Thousand Naira.

    It was only after the arrest was made and clarification received from CBN that the position of the officers of the Bank was not correct, that the ATMs started dispensing Five Thousand Naira to non-customers and Ten Thousand Naira to its customers.

    The team also arrested one Abdulkareem Shaibu, a Security Guard with Zenith Bank, 3rd Avenue Gwarimpa, as well as Ali Adam and Shafiu Umar.

    While Shaibu, the Security Guard was arrested for being in possession of five ATM cards which he was using to collect money for different unknown persons who were not within the Bank premises at that time, Adam and Umar were arrested in front of Zenith Bank, 1st Avenue Gwarimpa, for selling the new Naira notes.

    In another development, two officials of FCMB Ogo-Oluwa, Osogbo have been taken into custody for assault of officers of ICPC and CBN Cash Swap Monitoring Team.

    Recall that it was reported last week that the said branch was caught twice for loading wrapped bank notes inside its ATMs.

    The team, on a follow up visit to ascertain the bank’s compliance level, was assaulted right inside the Branch Manager’s office by the bank officials who vehemently refused to allow ICPC carry out its lawful duty, and then held hostage for about two hours.

    By the time the reinforcement of Police and NSCDC officers arrived the scene of the incident, the masterminds of the assaults had gone into hiding, leading to the arrest of two bank officers who were also complicit.

  • BREAKING: Supreme Court halts CBN from stopping use of old Naira notes

    BREAKING: Supreme Court halts CBN from stopping use of old Naira notes

    The Supreme Court of Nigeria has temporarily halted the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) from stopping the use of old Naira notes on February 10.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that the Supreme Court passed the verdict on Wednesday.

    A seven-member panel led by Justice John Okoro halted the move in a ruling in an exparte application brought by three Northern States of Kaduna, Kogi and Zamfara.

    The three States had specifically applied for an order of Interim Injunction restraining “the federal government through the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) or the commercial banks from suspending or determining or ending on Feb. 10, the time frame with which the now older version of the 200, 500 and 1,000 denomination of the naira may no longer be legal tender pending the hearing and determination of their motion on notice for interlocutory injunction”.

    Delivering ruling in the motion, Okoro, held that after a careful consideration of the motion exparte this application is granted as prayed.

    “An order of Interim Injunction restraining the federal government through the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) or the commercial banks from suspending or determining or ending on Feb. 10,, the time frame with which the now older version of the 200, 500 and 1,000 denomination of the naira may no longer be legal tender pending the hearing and determination of their motion on notice for interlocutory injunction”.

    He accordingly adjourned until Feb. 15, for hearing of the main suit.

    Moving the application on Wednesday, counsel to the applicants, Mr A. I. Mustapha, SAN, urged the apex court to grant the application in the interest of justice and the well-being of Nigeria.

    He stated that the policy of the government has led to an “excruciating situation that is almost leading to anarchy in the land “.

    While he referred to a Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN) statistics which put the number of people who don’t have bank accounts at over 60 percent, Mustapha lamented that the few Nigerians with bank accounts can’t even access their monies from the bank as a result of the policy.

    The senior lawyer further argued that unless the Supreme Court intervenes the situation will lead to anarchy because most banks are already closing operations.