Buhari: FG Will Punish
Banks, Importers Caught Round-tripping
President Muhammadu Buhari has said
that banks, importers and individuals involved in round-tripping of dollars
they buy from the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN) official market and resell in
the parallel market will be made to face the law when caught.
The president gave the warning in an
interview monitored on Al Jazeera television at the weekend.
Forex round-tripping or arbitrage
refers to a process whereby funds obtained from the official forex market (at
lower rates) and diverted to other markets and sold at a higher rate by forex
dealer, banks and end users.
There has been strong suspicion that
some banks and other end users that get weekly forex allocations from the CBN
divert some of the dollar cash to the parallel market because of the wide gap
between the official and parallel markets.
In his response to a question on
alleged round-tripping in the forex market, the president said: “I agree with
you, but we are going to check that and we are going to apply sanctions to
anybody that is given dollars by the central bank for the importation of
essential raw materials, for example pharmaceutical products, and because he
can make N100 more, goes to the parallel market to sell it. We will pursue them
and obviously would punish them.”
The CBN Governor, Mr. Godwin Ifeanyi
Emefiele, recently said the central bank was on the lookout to penalize banks
found in such unhealthy practice.
He also warned that if any bank was
caught in the act, it is not just the institution that would be penalized; its
management would also be severely punished.
Continuing, Buhari reiterated his
stance against the devaluation of the naira, maintaining that “countries that
play around with their currencies are countries that have enormous production
capacity”.
“They have factories in place, they
have infrastructure in terms of power, and their communications and security
are actually perfect,” he said.
According to him, Nigeria virtually
imports everything, from rice to toothpicks, adding: “If we don’t have the
money for importing those things, what is the value in further devaluing the
naira?”
He pointed out that in terms of the
country’s exchange rate policy; national interest supersedes the interest of
multilateral agencies such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF)?
“If it is against our national
interest, why can’t we go against the IMF’s advice? Nigeria can only afford to
live within its means. If we don’t have the money to back the naira for people
to buy the dollars and import toothpicks, chocolates, rice, glamorous dresses,”
he said.
When reminded that there were some
essential items such as the importation of pharmaceutical drugs that are also
being starved of forex, he said: “We have pharmaceutical companies in Nigeria.
“Once upon a time we did what was
called institutional strengthening by giving them monies to import machinery
and essential raw materials.
“We have already given instructions
for the ministries to find out which industries need foreign exchange on a
quarterly basis to produce those items that are essential, like pharmaceuticals
as you said, but certainly, not to import rice.”
Responding to a question on the
anomalies detected in the 2016 Appropriation Bill, the president, who pointed
out that drawing up budget estimates involves technocrats, did not rule out the
fact that there could be men and women in some ministries, departments and
agencies that are working against his government.
“Basically you know producing the
budget involves technocrats. I would like people to assess Nigeria, especially
this government on where we found ourselves.
“When we came in, there were 42
ministries and we found out that the economy cannot take all 42 ministries and
we reduced them to 24. The permanent secretaries, who are the heads of the
ministries as technocrats, 21 of them were removed.
“So, people who want to be fair to us
should sit down and reflect – the ministries, the permanent secretaries were
taken over after eight successive administrations.
“We cannot assume that from the
permanent secretaries downwards, they are 100 per cent loyal to the new
government. But we would apply sanctions. But since the budget is at the
National Assembly, I don’t want to talk more about that now,” he added.
He also urged member countries of the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to work together to save
oil producers from the present situation in the market.
“OPEC has to work together to save
the situation. If you can produce less and earn more, why produce more and earn
less? I have never been able to understand that, but the market forces are
influenced by a lot of political decisions, both regional and global, and we
have to live by it.
“OPEC as an organization has to be
mindful of the economic conditions in each member country because that is what
will influence that country’s ability to go along with OPEC’s decisions.
“For Nigeria, we were unable to diversify
our economy; hence we are much more disadvantaged by the low oil prices. OPEC
may try to help us, but clearly, it was basically our fault.
“In OPEC, there are individual
national interests: there are regional interests and there is OPEC’s interest. On
top of that there are global interests. Large producers like Russia, which are
not in OPEC, are swing producers. If Russia decides to go flat, it can disorganize
OPEC’S principle of controlled production.
“Certainly, under my leadership,
Nigeria will not withdraw from OPEC. Between 1976 and 1979, I served as
petroleum minister and I valued OPEC as an institution and I think Nigeria will
make the necessary sacrifice to remain in OPEC,” he said.
The president also said high demand
for forex by parents of students studying abroad had put pressure on the naira,
stating that any parent who can afford foreign education, should go ahead to
source for forex from autonomous sources.
According to him, “Those who can
afford foreign education for their children can go ahead, but Nigeria cannot
afford to allocate foreign exchange for those who decide to train their
children outside the country. We can’t just afford it. That is the true
situation we are in.”
The president’s remark on the
possible review of forex sales for foreign tuition conflicted with the CBN’s
statement three weeks ago when it allayed fears that it was going to stop the
sale of forex for school fees.
The central bank’s statement came on
the heels of the last meeting of the Bankers’ Committee where bank chief
executives had expressed concern over spiraling demand for forex for school
tuition oversees. However, no decision was taken on the issue at the meeting.
The statement by the Bankers’
Committee caused jitters in the forex market, as parents rushed to buy as much
dollars as they could get, leading to increased pressure on the naira which
depreciated by several percentage points to over N400 to the dollar in a space
of one week and forced the central bank to issue the statement to douse concerns
among millions of Nigerian parents.
Also, Buhari who less than two weeks
ago turned down the invitation to join the Islamic Coalition against Terrorism
put together by Saudi Arabia told Al Jazeera that Nigeria was in the coalition.
He had been asked whether Nigeria was
part of it and he answered: “We are part of it because we’ve got terrorists in
Nigeria that everybody knows claim that they are Islamic.
“So if there’s an Islamic coalition
to fight terrorism, Nigeria will be part of it because we are casualties of
Islamic terrorism.”
Asked whether he had spoken on
Nigeria’s membership of the coalition during his meeting with King Salman Bin
Abdul-Aziz during their meeting in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia recently, Buhari said
“yes.”
Asked to explain how the coalition
would work for Nigeria, he said he could not disclose the details.
However, he added: “Well, we
mentioned that under Lake Chad Basin Commission, our regional grouping
comprising Cameroun, Chad, Niger, Nigeria and Benin, we dedicated a certain
number of troops to be deployed in our own sub-region and I don’t think we have
to tell the press the details of that.”
Pressed further on how joining the
Islamic coalition would serve Nigeria’s security interest, he declared:
“Certainly. I’ve just told you it is the Boko Haram itself that declared
loyalty to ISIS.
“ISIS is basically based in Islamic
countries. Now, if there’s a coalition to fight Islamic terrorism, why can’t
Nigeria be part of it, while those that are fighting in Nigeria as Boko Haram
claim to be Muslims? But the way they are doing it is anti-Islamic.”
When his interviewer pointed out that
since Nigeria was roughly evenly divided among Christians and Muslims and that
some Christians were complaining that he was giving an Islamic identity to
Nigeria, the president wondered why Christians had not gone to fight Boko Haram
in the north or the militants sabotaging installations in the south.
“Why can’t those Christians that
complained go and fight terrorism in Nigeria or fight the militancy in the
south. It’s Nigeria that matters, not the opinion of some religious bigots,” he
stated.
On whether he was trying to change
the religious identity of the country, Buhari noted: “How can I change the
religious identity of Nigeria?
“No religion advocates hurting the
innocent and just because the Muslims are the ones that claim to be Boko Haram
and they are killing innocent people whether in the church, in the bus or in
the market place, then I will just sit and look at them because I too I’m a
Muslim? Islam is against injustice in any form.”
The president’s admission of
Nigeria’s membership of the Islamic coalition came a little under two weeks
after an official presidency statement suggested that Buhari had turned down
the invitation to be part of the coalition.
A statement by his media aide, Mr.
Garba Shehu, during the president’s trip to Saudi Arabia said that Buhari had
pledged Nigeria’s support for the coalition, but would not be part of it.
The statement said that two leaders
(Buhari and King Salman) who engaged in extensive discussions on regional and
global issues also agreed that terrorism posed a common threat to their states
and would require close cooperation to prevail over the threats.
It observed that Buhari who was
making his first pronouncement on the invitation to join the coalition of
Islamic states against terror spearheaded by the Saudis, congratulated the
Kingdom on its formation.
The statement quoted Buhari thus:
“Even if we are not a part of it, we support you. I must thank the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia for the recent creation of a coalition to address the menace of
international terrorism. Nigeria will support your efforts in keeping peace and
stopping the spread of terror in your region.
“This is in consonance with our own
commitment and ongoing efforts seeking to stamp out Boko Haram terrorists from
the West African sub-region and the Lake Chad Basin Commission (LCBC).”
Culled from This Day………………………..
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