Tag: Sanusi Lamido Sanusi

  • The travails of Sanusi Lamido Sanusi

    The travails of Sanusi Lamido Sanusi

    The former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi is not my favourite person and I have differences with him on many issues. I must however, commend his immense courage for speaking out and exposing the monuemental corruption in the government that he once served and that has now decided that they no longer require his services.

    Two weeks ago, he claimed that 20 billion US dollars had gone missing from the coffers of the NNPC. Today he has been suspended and relieved of his duties for exposing the rot and speaking the truth. I have little doubt that the next thing that will happen is that he will be subjected to a formal probe and the EFCC will be called in to investigate his tenure of office. They will throw everything that they have got at him including the kitchen sink simply because he refused to play ball with them and cover up their penchant for monuemental corruption and graft.

    Some of us have been there before and we know what it is like. If you speak truth to power and you take on the system be rest assured that the system will fight back and they will attempt to destroy you and all that is yours. Yet none of that matters because the only thing that is relevant is the fact that history and posterity will be kind to Sanusi on this matter based on the choices that he has made.

    He spoke out when others chose to remain silent and to compromise. Unlike others, he refused to sell his soul to the devil and to sell his heritage and birthright for a mess of pottage. Despite the significant differences that I have with this man in terms of our different outlooks to how and what Nigeria ought to be as a nation I salute him and commend him for his efforts.

    I also make bold to say that with his noble stand he has assured himself of a great place in the next dispensation and he will play a key role in the future of this country one way or the other. May God guide and protect him in all his endeavours and may he continue to speak out with courage and strength and not allow himself to be intimidated or silenced.

    Long is the road of righteousness and

    truth and it is often tarred with the

    spikes of persecution, misrepresentation and falsehood. Yet at the end of the day it is the only road that is worth taking and it is the only one that leads to lasting honour and glory.

    May that honour and glory find Sanusi Lamido Sanusi and may God reward him for putting the interests and welfare of the Nigerian people before that of the woeful and rotten administration that he once served.

    This government has once again shown that it has no shame and that it is utterly bereft of any semblance of decency or morality. A man blows the whistle and exposes the fact that 20 billion USD has been stolen and instead of commending him and promoting him he is accused of wrongdoing, criminalised, villified and suspended. It is only in Nigeria that this sort of thing can happen.

    It has happened to me and many others before and now it is happening to Sanusi. I commend his courage and his ability to stand up and speak the truth to power. No matter what the government accuses him of now and no matter what trumped-up charges or baseless allegations they may come up with against him in order to justify their actions, the Nigerian people will always be grateful to him and indebted to him for exposing the rot and filth that constitutes the very foundation of the government that he once served.

    The level of impugnity and disdain that the Jonathan administration has for the people and for probity and accountability is second to none. The message that they are sending is clear- no whistleblower is safe in this country and in this government. Their intention is to destroy all those that have the courage to stand up to them and to intimidate us all into silence but they will fail woefully.

    The more people they seek to destroy for no just cause and the more innocent men and women that they persecute for telling the truth and for exposing their monuemental corruption and incompetence, the more they shall be resisted by people. What they have done to Sanusi is disgraceful and they ought to bury their heads in shame.

    Pertinent and appropiate are Sanusi’s own words when, after he was informed about his unceremonious suspension, he responded all the way from Niger Republic by saying ‘’you can suspend an individual but you can’t suspend the truth’’. He immediately boarded the plane and headed for Nigeria knowing full well that the security agencies were waiting for him.

    The plan was to arrest him on arrival in Abuja but he cleverly diverted his chartered flight to Lagos where close friends of his, including the former Minister of FCT Mallam Nasir El Rufai, a true and loyal friend and brother if ever I knew one, was waiting for him. He managed to avoid arrest but on arrival at Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos the authorities stopped him briefly and took his passport from him.

    By that single act they have served him notice of their sinister intentions. In the coming days, weeks, months and even possibly years they will seek to humiliate him, to denigrate him, to malign him and to destroy his entire future. That is their intention but I firmly believe that it is not the intention of God and consequently they will fail. Providing he continues to stand firm and strong and remains undaunted such an evil plan cannot work and will not work simply because, as the Holy Bible says, ‘’the counsel of the ungodly shall not stand’’. It also says ‘’to subvert a righteous man in his course is not allowed’’ and that ‘’many are the afflictions of the righteous but the Lord will deliver him of them all’’.

    No matter how long it takes and no matter what they put him through Sanusi’s innocence will speak for him before God and before the Nigerian people. It is from the fiery furnace of persecution, misrepresentation and victimisation that true heroes are born. There is a spirit that emboldens and that stirs the passion and the soul of true warriors once they are sufficiently provoked. That spirit is known as the spirit of truth and it cannot be intimidated or denied.

    I must confess that it is very clear to me that Sanusi has that spirit and is possessed by that virtue. I say this because he was intelligent enough to know that with his utterances and his explosive disclosures about the graft in the NNPC and at the Ministry of Finance he was stepping on very powerful toes, treading on very dangerous grounds and swimming in very troubled waters. Yet despite the obvious dangers he continued and he was quite unmindful and unperturbed about what the direct consequences of his actions may be in terms of his personal safety, the security of his tenure of office or his career as a public servant.

    He was prepared to stand by and

    speak the truth no matter what

    and he was prepared to pay any price no matter whose ox was gored. That is the stuff of which heroes are made and I salute his courage. How I wish that more of our people were made of such stern stuff. If President Jonathan was really interested in fighting the war against corruption he would stop using his security agencies from tormenting and harassing innocent people.

    If he wanted to suspend some of his key officials and if he really wanted truth and justice to prevail he would not have targetted an innocent whistleblower who had constituted himself into a thorn in his flesh but instead he would have suspended Mr. Andrew Yakubu, his Group MD of NNPC, Mrs. Dieazani Allison-Madueke, his alluring Minister of Petroleum Resources and Mrs. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, his Minister of Finance pending the investigation into the missing 20 billion USD. Until he does that and as long as he continues to cover them all up and treat the Nigerian people with contempt and impugnity, no right-thinking person will take him or his administration seriously. This is all the more so for the following reasons. Firstly because it is a matter of public record that the accounts of NNPC have not been audited since 2005, secondly because Mrs. Allison-Madueke and the NNPC have admitted that 3.5 billion USD was spent on kerosene subsidy without appropriation and specifically against Presidential directives and thirdly because, Okonjo-Iweala has conceeded that at least 10.5 billion USD has gone missing and she has called for a formal probe into the whole matter so that all the figures can be reconciled. How I wish that at this point she would have resigned. The Ngozi that I once knew, who was a woman of impeccable breeding and deep substance and character, would certainly have done so.

    Sadly not many of the Jonathonians are familiar with the works of William Shakespeare simply because Shakespeare is not too popular in the creeks. Yet the few amongst them that are up to the task would do well to consider the words of Julius Caeser when he said “it is the custom of the immortal gods to grant temporary prosperity and a fairly long period of impunity to those whom they plan to punish for their crimes, so that they may feel it all the more keenly as a result of the change in their fortunes”. Those amongst the President’s supporters that truly love him and that have his interest at heart would do well to explain to him the import of these deeply profound words and wise counsel from Shakespeare’s ‘’Julius Caesar’’. In doing so they may save him and his entire court of royal jesters from a whole load of misery that undoubtedly awaits them in the future. As for Sanusi Lamido Sanusi it is very clear to me that the sky is the limit for him. Whether he likes it or not his journey into the turbulent world of partisan politics has just began and I suspect strongly that he has an appointment with destiny.

    Permit me to end this contribution with the following observation. In the last few days, much has been made about the fact that I have criticised Sanusi quite often in the past and that I have openly disagreed with some of his actions as Governor of Central Bank. It has also been said that on another occassion I raised some fundamental questions about what I described as his ‘’flawed and indefensible’’ position on the oil subsidy debate in 2012, his controversial views on Boko Haram, his position on revenue allocation vis a vis north and south and his harsh and historically inaccurate assertions about the Yoruba people a number of years ago. It is true that I opposed him on those matters and that I took those positions on those issues and I stand by each and every one of them. I do not see any big deal in that. Yet, many appear to be rather surprised that I would now be one of those that is defending the very same Sanusi that I have opposed in the past.

    Those that have expressed such surprise and that see this as some kind of glaring contradiction simply do not understand me. And neither do they appreciate the complexities of national debate and the importance of being completely detached and objective when it comes to any form of intellectual or public discourse. The truth is that I do not take positions against individuals but rather on specific issues. Hence I may be your friend and defender one day and your greatest critic and detractor the very next depending on what your position is on any specific matter. That is the essence of public discourse and intellectual debate. That is it’s nature. We must not be motivated or moved by personal considerations or by our love or hate for any individual but rather by principle, morality, logic, facts and figures, justice and the rights and wrongs of the specific issues of the day. No-one is all good and no-one is all bad. And neither is anyone, including yours truly, always right.

    The fact that I have disagreed with Sanusi over the last 20 years on a number of matters including his assesment of the Yoruba people, his views about the cause of the scourge called Boko Haram, the oil subsidy issue and the ‘’National Question’’ does not mean that I ought to support the fact that he is being treated in the most deplorable way by President Goodluck Jonathan. Though he and I disagree vehemently on many things it does not mean that we are enemies for life and neither does it mean that I should relish in it and remain silent when he is being treated unjustly and when he is being persecuted, humiliated and rubbished by the Federal Government. This is all the more so when he has courageously exposed the rot in the Jonathan administration. He may have got it wrong on other matters but on this issue I make bold to say that Sanusi got it right and he did the proper thing. He deserves my support, just as he deserves the support of all right-thinking people, and he can be rest assured that he has it.

     

  • The travails of Sanusi Lamido Sanusi

    The former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi is not my favourite person and I have differences with him on many issues. I must however, commend his immense courage for speaking out and exposing the monuemental corruption in the government that he once served and that has now decided that they no longer require his services.

    Two weeks ago, he claimed that 20 billion US dollars had gone missing from the coffers of the NNPC. Today he has been suspended and relieved of his duties for exposing the rot and speaking the truth. I have little doubt that the next thing that will happen is that he will be subjected to a formal probe and the EFCC will be called in to investigate his tenure of office. They will throw everything that they have got at him including the kitchen sink simply because he refused to play ball with them and cover up their penchant for monuemental corruption and graft.

    Some of us have been there before and we know what it is like. If you speak truth to power and you take on the system be rest assured that the system will fight back and they will attempt to destroy you and all that is yours. Yet none of that matters because the only thing that is relevant is the fact that history and posterity will be kind to Sanusi on this matter based on the choices that he has made.

    He spoke out when others chose to remain silent and to compromise. Unlike others, he refused to sell his soul to the devil and to sell his heritage and birthright for a mess of pottage. Despite the significant differences that I have with this man in terms of our different outlooks to how and what Nigeria ought to be as a nation I salute him and commend him for his efforts.

    I also make bold to say that with his noble stand he has assured himself of a great place in the next dispensation and he will play a key role in the future of this country one way or the other. May God guide and protect him in all his endeavours and may he continue to speak out with courage and strength and not allow himself to be intimidated or silenced.

    Long is the road of righteousness and

    truth and it is often tarred with the

    spikes of persecution, misrepresentation and falsehood. Yet at the end of the day it is the only road that is worth taking and it is the only one that leads to lasting honour and glory.

    May that honour and glory find Sanusi Lamido Sanusi and may God reward him for putting the interests and welfare of the Nigerian people before that of the woeful and rotten administration that he once served.

    This government has once again shown that it has no shame and that it is utterly bereft of any semblance of decency or morality. A man blows the whistle and exposes the fact that 20 billion USD has been stolen and instead of commending him and promoting him he is accused of wrongdoing, criminalised, villified and suspended. It is only in Nigeria that this sort of thing can happen.

    It has happened to me and many others before and now it is happening to Sanusi. I commend his courage and his ability to stand up and speak the truth to power. No matter what the government accuses him of now and no matter what trumped-up charges or baseless allegations they may come up with against him in order to justify their actions, the Nigerian people will always be grateful to him and indebted to him for exposing the rot and filth that constitutes the very foundation of the government that he once served.

    The level of impugnity and disdain that the Jonathan administration has for the people and for probity and accountability is second to none. The message that they are sending is clear- no whistleblower is safe in this country and in this government. Their intention is to destroy all those that have the courage to stand up to them and to intimidate us all into silence but they will fail woefully.

    The more people they seek to destroy for no just cause and the more innocent men and women that they persecute for telling the truth and for exposing their monuemental corruption and incompetence, the more they shall be resisted by people. What they have done to Sanusi is disgraceful and they ought to bury their heads in shame.

    Pertinent and appropiate are Sanusi’s own words when, after he was informed about his unceremonious suspension, he responded all the way from Niger Republic by saying ‘’you can suspend an individual but you can’t suspend the truth’’. He immediately boarded the plane and headed for Nigeria knowing full well that the security agencies were waiting for him.

    The plan was to arrest him on arrival in Abuja but he cleverly diverted his chartered flight to Lagos where close friends of his, including the former Minister of FCT Mallam Nasir El Rufai, a true and loyal friend and brother if ever I knew one, was waiting for him. He managed to avoid arrest but on arrival at Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos the authorities stopped him briefly and took his passport from him.

    By that single act they have served him notice of their sinister intentions. In the coming days, weeks, months and even possibly years they will seek to humiliate him, to denigrate him, to malign him and to destroy his entire future. That is their intention but I firmly believe that it is not the intention of God and consequently they will fail. Providing he continues to stand firm and strong and remains undaunted such an evil plan cannot work and will not work simply because, as the Holy Bible says, ‘’the counsel of the ungodly shall not stand’’. It also says ‘’to subvert a righteous man in his course is not allowed’’ and that ‘’many are the afflictions of the righteous but the Lord will deliver him of them all’’.

    No matter how long it takes and no matter what they put him through Sanusi’s innocence will speak for him before God and before the Nigerian people. It is from the fiery furnace of persecution, misrepresentation and victimisation that true heroes are born. There is a spirit that emboldens and that stirs the passion and the soul of true warriors once they are sufficiently provoked. That spirit is known as the spirit of truth and it cannot be intimidated or denied.

    I must confess that it is very clear to me that Sanusi has that spirit and is possessed by that virtue. I say this because he was intelligent enough to know that with his utterances and his explosive disclosures about the graft in the NNPC and at the Ministry of Finance he was stepping on very powerful toes, treading on very dangerous grounds and swimming in very troubled waters. Yet despite the obvious dangers he continued and he was quite unmindful and unperturbed about what the direct consequences of his actions may be in terms of his personal safety, the security of his tenure of office or his career as a public servant.

    He was prepared to stand by and

    speak the truth no matter what

    and he was prepared to pay any price no matter whose ox was gored. That is the stuff of which heroes are made and I salute his courage. How I wish that more of our people were made of such stern stuff. If President Jonathan was really interested in fighting the war against corruption he would stop using his security agencies from tormenting and harassing innocent people.

    If he wanted to suspend some of his key officials and if he really wanted truth and justice to prevail he would not have targetted an innocent whistleblower who had constituted himself into a thorn in his flesh but instead he would have suspended Mr. Andrew Yakubu, his Group MD of NNPC, Mrs. Dieazani Allison-Madueke, his alluring Minister of Petroleum Resources and Mrs. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, his Minister of Finance pending the investigation into the missing 20 billion USD. Until he does that and as long as he continues to cover them all up and treat the Nigerian people with contempt and impugnity, no right-thinking person will take him or his administration seriously. This is all the more so for the following reasons. Firstly because it is a matter of public record that the accounts of NNPC have not been audited since 2005, secondly because Mrs. Allison-Madueke and the NNPC have admitted that 3.5 billion USD was spent on kerosene subsidy without appropriation and specifically against Presidential directives and thirdly because, Okonjo-Iweala has conceeded that at least 10.5 billion USD has gone missing and she has called for a formal probe into the whole matter so that all the figures can be reconciled. How I wish that at this point she would have resigned. The Ngozi that I once knew, who was a woman of impeccable breeding and deep substance and character, would certainly have done so.

    Sadly not many of the Jonathonians are familiar with the works of William Shakespeare simply because Shakespeare is not too popular in the creeks. Yet the few amongst them that are up to the task would do well to consider the words of Julius Caeser when he said “it is the custom of the immortal gods to grant temporary prosperity and a fairly long period of impunity to those whom they plan to punish for their crimes, so that they may feel it all the more keenly as a result of the change in their fortunes”. Those amongst the President’s supporters that truly love him and that have his interest at heart would do well to explain to him the import of these deeply profound words and wise counsel from Shakespeare’s ‘’Julius Caesar’’. In doing so they may save him and his entire court of royal jesters from a whole load of misery that undoubtedly awaits them in the future. As for Sanusi Lamido Sanusi it is very clear to me that the sky is the limit for him. Whether he likes it or not his journey into the turbulent world of partisan politics has just began and I suspect strongly that he has an appointment with destiny.

    Permit me to end this contribution with the following observation. In the last few days, much has been made about the fact that I have criticised Sanusi quite often in the past and that I have openly disagreed with some of his actions as Governor of Central Bank. It has also been said that on another occassion I raised some fundamental questions about what I described as his ‘’flawed and indefensible’’ position on the oil subsidy debate in 2012, his controversial views on Boko Haram, his position on revenue allocation vis a vis north and south and his harsh and historically inaccurate assertions about the Yoruba people a number of years ago. It is true that I opposed him on those matters and that I took those positions on those issues and I stand by each and every one of them. I do not see any big deal in that. Yet, many appear to be rather surprised that I would now be one of those that is defending the very same Sanusi that I have opposed in the past.

    Those that have expressed such surprise and that see this as some kind of glaring contradiction simply do not understand me. And neither do they appreciate the complexities of national debate and the importance of being completely detached and objective when it comes to any form of intellectual or public discourse. The truth is that I do not take positions against individuals but rather on specific issues. Hence I may be your friend and defender one day and your greatest critic and detractor the very next depending on what your position is on any specific matter. That is the essence of public discourse and intellectual debate. That is it’s nature. We must not be motivated or moved by personal considerations or by our love or hate for any individual but rather by principle, morality, logic, facts and figures, justice and the rights and wrongs of the specific issues of the day. No-one is all good and no-one is all bad. And neither is anyone, including yours truly, always right.

    The fact that I have disagreed with

    Sanusi over the last 20 years on a

    number of matters including his assesment of the Yoruba people, his views about the cause of the scourge called Boko Haram, the oil subsidy issue and the ‘’National Question’’ does not mean that I ought to support the fact that he is being treated in the most deplorable way by President Goodluck Jonathan. Though he and I disagree vehemently on many things it does not mean that we are enemies for life and neither does it mean that I should relish in it and remain silent when he is being treated unjustly and when he is being persecuted, humiliated and rubbished by the Federal Government. This is all the more so when he has courageously exposed the rot in the Jonathan administration. He may have got it wrong on other matters but on this issue I make bold to say that Sanusi got it right and he did the proper thing. He deserves my support, just as he deserves the support of all right-thinking people, and he can be rest assured that he has it.

  • Why CBN may not cut MPR, by RenCap

    Why CBN may not cut MPR, by RenCap

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) will, rather than reduce the Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) from current 12 per cent, be compelled to hike it by one percentage point in the fourth quarter, Renaissance Capital (RenCap), has said.

    The investment and research firm said in an emailed report titled: Pan-African Banking: ‘A Comprehensive Guide to Sub-Saharan African Banks’, the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC’s) hawkishness in the January statement makes it believes that any risk to policy change in the short term, is on the upside.

    The report released, at the weekend, said low fiscal savings the excess crude account had $2.5 billion at December last year, a quarter of the $9.9 billion that was in the account a year earlier.

    It said an increase in the exposure of foreign exchange reserves to portfolio inflows suggest that further tightening may be required to keep the naira from depreciating and to sustain low inflation.

    It said the suspended CBN Governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi’s firm policy stance had been effective at slowing inflation to eight per cent year-on-year in December, from 12 per cent year-on-year earlier.

    “It remains to be seen whether his strict policies will remain in place. The CBN’s benign inflation outlook of six to nine per cent for this year and four to seven per cent in 2015 – suggests that the risk to interest rates is to the downside,” it said.

    RenCap however, doubts rates cut, adding that such would trigger capital flight, weaken the naira and push up inflation. It said the real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth in 2014 would improve to 6.9 per cent, from 2013 estimate of 6.7 per cent, under the current GDP series.

    “We expect an increase in government spending, due to election-related expenses that will help spur an increase in economic activity. Upside to the oil price, on the back of a stronger global economy, is positive for Nigeria’s consumer. Moreover, lower inflation should also support stronger household consumption,” it said.

    It said the upside risk to Nigeria’s growth projection, is a significant improvement in oil production on the back of a slowdown in oil theft. “We expect growth in 2014 to improve to 6.9 per cent from our 2013 estimate of 6.7 per cent, under the current GDP series. We expect an increase in the government spending, due to election-related expenses that will help spur an increase in economic activity,” it said.

  • Sanusi’s powerful,  unforgiving and  numberless enemies

    Sanusi’s powerful, unforgiving and numberless enemies

    BY now, former Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, must have gauged both the intensity of the hatred nursed against him by powerful Nigerians and how quite sizable in number his enemies are. His distinct and attractive elocution, not to say his measured and engaging cadence, may give the impression he could not care less what anyone thought of him or the policies he mercilessly enunciated as boss of the apex bank. But he is human, and judging from the way he scurried to the courts for relief, a step that opened him up to skewering by newspaper publisher Jimoh Ibrahim, he apparently now feels anything but the pianissimo calm that accompanied his public appearances during his eventful and furious five years in the CBN.

    President Goodluck Jonathan has many enemies, but it is likely they loathe him more on account of his giant and unending acts of omission than his piddling acts of commission. Not so Mallam Sanusi. His enemies, it has manifested in the past few days since President Jonathan sacked him, loathe him roundly, robustly, perfectly and fanatically. Such hatreds do not often need substantiation. The slightly built central bank chief now has the honour of being hated in an unreasonable way, as all men of stature and spunk usually are. He is hated by intellectuals whose gifted and deft deployment of logic to grand and complex issues we had, until now, admired over the years. He is hated by newspaper publishers and editorial writers whose judgement and reasonableness had for many years stood the republic well in the fight to enthrone liberal political and economic thoughts. And he is now alarmingly hated by famous legal minds and jurists to whose courts and services lovers of freedom had confidently made recourse for decades.

    Clearly Mallam Sanusi is not in a position to be envied by anyone, where he is so hated that even before he is buried many are spitting on his empty grave. Perhaps if he had the opportunity to once again hold down the position of CBN governor, he would change his style. The fact, however, is that he will never get that chance again. And while his style and some of his policies grated badly on most Nigerians, they are no excuse for the unconstitutionality perpetrated by the Jonathan government and the clearly absurd logic propounded by those happy to see him humiliated.

    One such illogic dangerously averred by Mike Ozekhome, a lawyer and activist of great standing, is the argument that since the constitution was silent on whether or not a CBN governor could be suspended, the benefit of the doubt must be resolved in favour of President Jonathan. It probably never occurred to Mr Ozekhome and others who think like him that neither the constitution not its framers were stupid to imagine that the office and onerous and delicate responsibilities of a CBN governor were compatible with the destabilising influence of a suspension provision, not to talk of whimsical removal. The constitution is sensible enough to know, unlike the president and his supporters, that there could not be a middle ground between the appointment and removal of a CBN governor.

    Arguing that what is not prohibited or forbidden is allowed, Mr Ozekhome blindly bases his conclusion on the two grounds that the removal of a CBN governor ‘has’ to be preceded by suspension a clear nonsense and that if a removal, it can follow due process, or if a suspension, does not need any process at all. The gravamen of both grounds, it seems to Barometer, is that Mr Ozekhome vouchsafes to the president the unhindered and authoritarian power to sack any CBN governor. For in the exultant and hysterical opinion of the lawyer, not in the understanding of any intelligent reader of the constitution, the president could sack even before making recourse to the Senate.

    If the president was at first a little wary of the unconstitutionality of his desperate move against Mallam Sanusi, with the support he has garnered since he sacked the former apex bank boss, many of whom (like the aviation big player Ayirimi Emami) gloated over the sack, he must be supremely more confident now. The line between reason and unreason, between logic and illogic, and between law and lawlessness has been considerably blurred by emotions, petty hatreds and jealousies. The point is not that Mallam Sanusi cannot or should not be sacked; the point is that the law must be followed to the hilt, unambiguously and without the abstruse cleverness of legal rascality. The fear now is that, whether we like it or not, a dangerous man with the natural instinct of an autocrat has been armed to do more damage to a country long enfeebled by lack of bureaucratic and intellectual discipline.

  • NEITI and NNPC’s ‘complex’ accounts

    When the suspended Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, alleged that the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) was yet to remit $10.8 billion to the Federation Account, the oil firm’s leadership accused him of confusion and ignorance.

    Labouring to defend his dismissal of Sanusi during his last media chat, the president referred to how the CBN chief had tied himself up in knots bandying different figures allegedly not remitted by the NNPC.

    Now, it appears that the list of the ‘ignorant’ and ‘confused’ is getting longer. A presentation made by the Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI), Mrs. Zainab Ahmed, before the Joint House Committee probing the Berne Declaration report, has claimed that not only was Nigeria losing an estimated $8 billion annually through the crude oil-for-refined products exchange arrangement, aka crude oil swaps, NNPC may have failed to remit $22.8billion to the Federation Account.

    Berne Declaration, a Switzerland-based non-governmental advocacy group published a report titled “Swiss Traders’ Opaque Deals in Nigeria” last year.

    The report alleged that every year Nigeria loses billions of dollars as large volumes of oil are exported for well below the market price. It further alleges that the subsidy scheme for imports of refined petroleum products was systematically defrauded.

    NEITI’s Ahmed told the House Committee on Petroleum Resources (Upstream) that the findings came out of its audit report on the finances of the oil corporation for 2009 to 2011.

    Quick as a flash, NNPC spokesman Dr. Omar Farouk Ibrahim reacted to what he argued was an orchestrated campaign of calumny designed to tarnish the corporation’s image. He said sensational headlines had been written misrepresenting the contents of the NEITI report. Significantly, Ahmed has not retracted her assertions before the committee.

    When she appeared before the hearing Ahmed said, “There is similarity in NEITI’s audit report and the Berne Declaration report. The report has a lot of substance in it. NEITI will go back and link the Berne Declaration report with the NEITI audit report.”

    But until Ahmed comes up with damning evidence against the corporation, NNPC executives can sleep soundly – after all they are the only ones who understand this oily business and its peculiar accounts.

    Even statutory agencies that should be combing through the corporation’s books are throwing in the towel. At its budget defence before the Senate Committee on Drugs, Narcotics, Financial Crimes and Anti-Corruption, the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC) said its inability to probe NNPC over the years was down to the ‘sophistication’ of the corporation’s accounts.

    Professor Olu Aina, Acting Chairman of the Commission’s board said: “The account of NNPC is so sophisticated that it would require hiring financial experts to study it for needed investigation the cost of which, however, cannot be afforded by us now due to underfunding.”

    As it was in the beginning, so it is now and forever – the words of Sanusi et al against those of executives who keep telling the rest of us “you can’t understand this!” Truly, we just can’t understand: except if the NNPC spokesman is suggesting that NEITI has now merged with the All Progressives Congress (APC).

  • Sanusi sues Jonathan

    Sanusi sues Jonathan

    •NLC faults suspension

    Suspended Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi has sued President Goodluck Jonathan before a Federal High Court sitting in Abuja, challenging his suspension from office.

    In a suit filed late Monday by some of his lawyers, including Kola Awodein (SAN), Sanusi is urging the court to, among others, restrain the President and two others from giving effect to his purported suspension, pending the determination of his suit.

    Also to be restrained are the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) and the Inspector General of Police (IGP), sued with the President.

    Sanusi is pleading for an order of interlocutory injunction restraining the defendants from obstructing, disturbing, stopping or preventing him in any manner, from performing the functions of his office and enjoying in full, the statutory powers and privileges attached to the office of the governor of the CBN.

    He said the interlocutory application he filed with the suit was necessitated by the issues raised in the suit.

    Sanusi is of the view that delay could occasion irreparable, serious damage and mischief against him in the exercise of his statutory duties as the CBN Governor.

    He urged the court to grant the prayers contained in his interlocutory application, on the ground that the President’s alleged unlawful interference with the management and administration of the CBN, unless arrested, posed grave danger to the country’s economy.

    He argued that granting his application will encourage parties to maintain the status quo, pending the determination of the substantive case.

    In a supporting affidavit, Sanusi averred that in the course of his duties as the CBN Governor, that he discovered certain discrepancies in respect of amounts repatriated to the federation account from the proceed of crude oil sales between the period of January, 2012 and July, 2013 and that he expressed concern in respect of the said discrepancies and had cause to inform the National Assembly of the said discrepancies because they affect the revenue of the federation and the national economy.

    He stated that the President’s action, in purporting to suspend him from office, is aimed at punishing him for these disclosures.

    Sanusi stated that he is challenging the President’s power to suspend him from office, noting that the President did not approach nor obtain the support of the Senate, based on his discussions with several senators, including Senator Bukola Saraki.

    “I have been informed, and I verily believe the information given to me by Senator Bukola Saraki to be true and correct that the Senate did not give the President any support for my purported suspension and removal from office as the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria.”

    Sanusi stated that the President’s actions in suspending him from office. Is contrary to provisions of the Central Bank of Nigeria Act relating to the appointment and removal of the CBN Governor and that his purported suspension amounts to unlawful interference in the administration and management of the apex bank and is illegal, null and void. He urged the court, in the interest of justice, to grant his reliefs.

    The suit is yet to be assigned for hearing.

     

  • Uncertain days ahead for equities, investors

    Uncertain days ahead for equities, investors

    Nigerian equities lost N354 billion in two days of announcement of the suspension of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi by President Goodluck Jonathan. Capital Market Editor, Taofik Salako, reports that most pundits still expect further capital flight as investors scramble away from the uncertainties foisted by the unprecedented move

    Nigerian financial markets appear to be in the cold and investors appear to be uncertain of the days ahead. The only time-tested certainty for most pundits and investors is the scramble for safety, quick exit to watch the direction of event. Thursday’s suspension of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi by President Goodluck Jonathan is riveting the financial markets. Investors in Nigerian equities have lost N354 billion between Thursday and Friday as sudden upsurge in sale orders on Thursday tripped the hitherto bullish market situation. Market capitalisation of equities dropped by N167 billion on Friday, in addition to N187 billion lost in immediate reaction as the news of the suspension broke out on Thursday.

    Aggregate market value of all quoted equities dropped to a low of N12.301 trillion as against its opening value of N12.468 trillion. The benchmark index at the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE)-the All Share Index (ASI), indicated a daily average decline of 1.34 per cent, bringing the decline since Thursday to 2.81 per cent. The ASI, which tracks the values of all quoted companies on the NSE and as such serves as country index for Nigeria, had declined by 1.47 per cent on Thursday. The ASI closed yesterday at a low index point of 38,295.74 points as against its opening index of 38,816.19 points. As the news of the suspension filtered into the market on Thursday, aggregate market value of all quoted equities dropped by N187 billion from N12.655 trillion to close at N12.468 trillion. The ASI also dwindled to 38,816.19 points as against its opening index of 39,397.09.

    Analysts were unanimous that the downtrend was in reaction to the suspension of the CBN Governor. Aggregate market value of all equities at the NSE had witnessed sustained rally between Monday and Wednesday. It opened the week at N12.427 trillion and built up successively to N12.528 trillion, N12.530 trillion and N12.655 trillion on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday respectively. The ASI had also sustained steady rally prior to the reversal on Thursday. ASI opened at 38,767.29 points and built up to 38,964.75 points, 38,972.56 points and 39,397.09 points within the first three trading days.

    The Nation’s review at the weekend showed that market considerations of most equities at the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) crashed to their low on Friday. From the banking to manufacturing to downstream oil sectors, most leading equities slipped to their lowest prices this year at the weekend. Most banking stocks fell to their lowest market considerations. Share prices of multinationals, which usually feature largely in portfolios of foreign investors, highlighted the panic among foreign portfolio investors.

    “The uncertainty surrounding policy direction and political risk in the economy brought on by the foregoing (suspension of Sanusi) is likely to spur further capital flight to safer regions or safer asset classes. With foreign portfolio investor’s constituting 50.0 per cent of the Nigerian stock market, any significant amount of capital flight is likely to have weighty consequences on the market. Since this development, the NSE ASI has lost a total of 2.8 per cent, due to selling pressures emanating from foreign and local market players reacting to the news. The true impact of this development is however yet to unravel as the news continues to filter across markets and participants,” Afrinvest (West Africa), a major investment firm, stated at the weekend.

    According to analysts at Afrinvest, the particular significance of foreign portfolio investors in the economy will be revealed in the days ahead as investors scramble to safety. Blue chip stocks with significantly diversified foreign interest will be the most likely culprits of this capital flight.

    Emerging market strategist, Standard Bank, Samir Gadio, said “Sanusi’s suspension is a disruptive move which indicates that the CBN has de facto lost much of its independence.”

    The circumstance of Sanusi’s exit and the issue of independence of the CBN are two issues that are of concern to foreign investors rather than the exit or the politics of his suspension. But many foreign investors appeared concerned about the negative view on the anti-corruption record of President Jonathan. The circumstance of Sanusi’s suspension- after the CBN Governor alleged and made public presentations on missing funds-some $20 billion, from the national oil company, has been the headlines for most global media reports, irrespective of the allegation of financial recklessness leveled against the suspended governor.

    “I believe that most market operators had factored in the fact that Sanusi’s leaving could lead to some adjustments in monetary policies. The issue to investors in the Nigerian market will be the nature of his exit and whether it has undermined CBN independence. Another factor that will be of concern to investors is the economic and policy orientation of the newly nominated CBN Governor and his pedigree as an independent minded person. These two factors – an affront on CBN autonomy and lack of clarity on Mr. Emefiele’s economic policy orientation may be the reasons for financial market instability with possible exit of some foreign portfolio investors, depletion of Nigeria’s foreign reserve, pressure on Naira exchange rate and increase in fixed income yield in the next couple of days and weeks,” Managing Director, Cowry Asset Management Limited, Mr. Johnson Chukwu told The Nation.

    “Foreign investors are likely to sell Nigerian assets more actively in coming days subject to market liquidity constraints. So far Treasury bill and bond quotes are not really being shown by onshore brokers (or the bid-ask spreads are quite wide) which is typical of Nigerian capital markets during periods of pronounced stress. That said, we see yields moving higher in the near term, with the magnitude of the sell-off at the long end potentially being partially mitigated by the bid from domestic pension funds at a later stage,” London-based Gadio said.

    Analysts at Afrinvest expect the ripples to move round the financial markets-from equities to bonds and currency exchanges.

    According to analysts, there is an expectation that the yields on Nigerian sovereign bonds will cross the 15 per cent mark in the near term and also at the March 2014 bonds auction as investors weigh in on the decision of the Federal Government.

    “This development is likely to lead to an increase in the country’s risk premium, thus requiring a re-pricing of yields to incentivise investors. This increase will undoubtedly raise the governments cost of borrowing, exacerbating re-current expenditure (over 65.0% in 2014). The country may also find it tough raising additional funds through Eurobond issuances and may be lured to raise the coupon to compensate for the higher risk perception. Nonetheless, the high yield environment should be attractive to Pension Fund Administrators which are major players in the bond market. This could serve as a buffer in reducing the increased upside pressure on yields over the medium term,” Afrinvest stated.

    Market pundits expect further depreciation in Naira as the CBN battles to calm nervous investors. According to Afrinvest, Naira may depreciate by about 2.0 per cent this week, driven by increased demand for foreign currency by foreign portfolio investors seeking a flight to safety.

    The capital flight could also have a telling effect on Nigeria’s foreign reserves. The Nigerian foreign reserves shrunk by $2.3 billion or 5.3 per cent from $43.6bn in December 31, 2013 to $41.3bn as at February 19, 2014. This was primarily used to defend the Naira, sustaining it within the CBN’s band N155/US$1 +/- 3 per cent against selling pressure triggered by foreign portfolio investments reversals. According to Afrinvest, foreign portfolio investments constitute 48.8 per cent of the total reserves, highlighting the significant impact of a drastic reversal on the country.

    However, analysts at GTI Securities called for caution but expressed optimism that the momentum of the negative reaction might slow down in the days ahead.

    According to analysts, the rampaging sell-off could drop significantly in the days ahead as many stocks have entered oversold position, creating attractive buy opportunities for discerning investors.

     

  • NLC faults Sanusi’s suspension

    NLC faults Sanusi’s suspension

    PRESIDENT Goodluck Jonathan’s defence of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi’s suspension seems to be unconvincing to its critics.

    To the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Jonathan did not follow due process in suspending Sanusi from office.

    According to the NLC President, Abdulwahed Ibrahim Omar, Sanusi may not have finished his work on the missing fund before going public, but this is not enough justification for his suspension.

    The NLC issued a statement titled: “Sanusi’s removal failed litmus test of due process”, signed by Omar.

    He said: “While we hold Sanusi accountable for not doing his home work properly before going public on an issue as sensitive as this, especially considering the sum involved, we believe the process of his removal is patently flawed and ridicules due process as well as contemptuous of the Act establishing the CBN.”

    Omar added that the suspension was capable of discouraging whistle blowers in government as well as casting a pall on the government’s fight against corruption, neither of which is good for its image.

    The congress also noted that the “government’s action is negatively pre-emptive and malicious, by virtue of the fact that full investigations into the allegations had not been concluded before it removed Sanusi and also the fact that it had sent in to the Senate for confirmation the name of his successor”.

    Omar recalled that the NLC has “watched with concern the exchanges between Sanusi and the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) on the one hand and Sanusi and the Minister of Finance on the other, which sadly has culminated in the removal of Sanusi by way of a suspension from office.”

    These exchanges, he said, dwelled on allegedly unremitted billions of dollars into the Federation Account.

    Faulting the suspended CBN governor for what he called inconsistency, he said by the time the dust had settled, Sanusi had quoted three figures as the alleged sum not accounted for by NNPC, earning him a quiet rebuke by the Senate, which is investigating the alleged fraud.

    He stated: “In saner climes, Sanusi was expected to have turned in his letter of resignation the next day for getting the figures wrong, for misleading the public and for embarrassing the government, his excuse of poor communication between the relevant institutions in question notwithstanding. The least expected of him was a public apology.

    “We are not sure if he did either of the two until his removal was announced in a typical Nigerian-government style.”

    The President of the congress was surprised that Sanusi and the government could part ways despite his anti-labour stance.

    He recalled that during the anti-fuel subsidy protest in 2012, Sanusi refused to apologise for the exposure of the scam.

    The statement reads in parts: “Sanusi’s sins notwithstanding, government must not only follow the law but must be seen to follow the law. Rather than dissipate energy on Sanusimania, government should focus on irrebuttable cases of corruption and bring the culprits to book. They are legion but we dare mention only the Sure-P missing funds, the BMW bulletproof cars, the Sanusi revelations at NNPC.

    “It is common knowledge that over the years NNPC has not come clean on the issue of remittances to the federation account, a fact responsible for the routine shunning of invitations by the National Assembly.

    “In our view, the most important thing is that government should not lose sight of its fight against corruption, which is the major issue here. Government’s commitment to this scourge should be demonstrable, clear and unambiguous.”

    Goodluck Jonathan

  • Sanusi not a whistle blower, says minister

    Sanusi not a whistle blower, says minister

    Minister of Information Labaran Maku, yesterday said it is a misnomer to call suspended Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi a whistle blower.

    Maku who spoke at the National Assembly after defending the 2014 budget of his ministry noted that no governor of any country’s apex bank could act as a whistle blower.

    The minister said President Goodluck Jonathan did not query Sanusi because he raised issues about alleged missing $20 billion in Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC)

    He said: “I have not heard of any nation where the central bank governor is a whistle blower. He is the manager of the nation’s monetary policies as an adviser to the president on those issues. So the fact that he has moved from being the CBN governor to whistle blowing is a problem in itself.

    “No CBN governor make statement on his nation’s economy without verifying. Things were done and the president didn’t worry about it and his removal had nothing to do with that.

    “These days we see a lot of outlandish allegations. People just make allegations and turn the country into one huge investigation panel, every day the National Assembly is investigating.”

     

    “The role of the CBN governor is that of a quite role, you don’t even hear them talk and if he makes any statement, it affect the capital market and the entire economy.”

     

  • Niger Delta activist backs Jonathan on Sanusi

    Niger Delta activist backs Jonathan on Sanusi

    A Niger Delta youth activist, businessman and politician, Chief Ayiri Emami, has backed President Goodluck Jonathan on the suspension of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi.

    Emami, who is the Akulaga of Warri kingdom in a statement yesterday, said Sanusi ought to have been sacked long ago.

    He described the cashless policy as anti-Niger Delta, adding that he had carried out his responsibilities with arrogance.

    Sanusi said: “The huge fund running into hundreds of billions of naira that were frittered away as donations, grants to religious bodies, payments to moribund airlines, illegal loans write-off and other sundry expenditures made without recourse to the CBN Act and the board were gotten from oil revenue from the Niger Delta region.

    “Mr. Sanusi never deemed it fit to fly one of the numerous private jets to these oil bearing but underdeveloped areas of the Niger Delta region to do an on-the-spot assessment of how the cashless policy would impact negatively on their businesses and lives as it affect payment of salaries to workers and transaction of business in a largely bank-less environment with hundreds of thousands of workers.

    “So, to us in the business hub of the riverine oil bearing area, Sanusi’s cashless policy is definitely cruel and anti-Niger Delta.”