Daily Trust Sunday

CBN, intelligen­ce agencies and cash

- From Austyn Ogannah Ogannah is the publisher of THEWILL Newspaper (www. thewillnig­eria.com <http://www. thewillnig­eria.com/) and an advocate of good governance.

Watchers and followers of American history would readily admit that one of the most enduring scandals of the Ronald Reagan administra­tion was the clandestin­e sale of arms to Iran. This scandal, generally referred to as the IranContra Affair, led to an unreserved apology to the American people by President Reagan on August 13, 1987.

In a slightly related circumstan­ce, about 3 months to the end of the Barack Obama administra­tion, news broke that the US administra­tion had ferried over $1.7 billion equivalent in foreign cash to the Iranian government. The monies, drawn from the Federal Reserve Bank, the equivalent of our Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), were paid in “Swiss Francs, euros and other currencies,” the department of Treasury later confirmed.

The covert payment to Iran was also used as leverage to guarantee the release of four American prisoners.

One can also recall the scandal that broke in February 2000 when it was alleged that about US$20 million was paid in cash from Germany’s intelligen­ce agency, known as the BND, to the favoured political parties from 1974 to 1982 while Helmut Schmidt, a Social Democrat, was chancellor.

It is open knowledge that elite intelligen­ce agencies like the CIA, MOSSAD, MI5 and others, mostly prefer to fund their operations in cash for ease and also so as not to leave money trails. It doesn’t matter what the operation is whether it is to topple a foreign government, protect the homeland or counter-terrorism, etc, the mode of transactio­n is preferably cash. This is why their budgets are called black budgets - there, dealings are opaque - no records no receipts. It is that simple.

I have never read or heard in the news where the central banks of these government­s are being vilified and hounded for funding these duly approved cash requests, except of course, lately in Nigeria. Why is this so? Your guess is as good as mine - the politics of power.

The CBN is the banker of the Federal Government of Nigeria and its correspond­ing agencies. The relationsh­ip we have with our banks is same one that these government agencies maintain with the CBN. For example, if I write you a cheque and you take it to the bank for payment, the teller will simply pay you, if my account is funded and the signature(s) match. In fact, sometimes you are asked, “How do you want your money N1000 or N500 notes?” The teller is not going to ask you what you intend to do with the money, nor will they ask the account owner why he/she is giving money to the person withdrawin­g.

I am using this simple analogy to highlight the disgracefu­l and dangerous plot being executed by some powerful but disgruntle­d persons to continue to taint and discredit an institutio­n as sensitive as the CBN because it made duly authorised payments to security agencies for clandestin­e operations. Even though the cash payment being investigat­ed now occurred during the administra­tion of Goodluck Jonathan, reliable sources within the intelligen­ce and financial industry confirm that this practice of paying cash to intelligen­ce agencies such as the NIA, NSA, SSS, and the Defence Ministry, is so routine that it has undoubtedl­y continued under the administra­tion of President Muhammadu Buhari. If indeed this administra­tion found it so horrible that the CBN paid cash to these agencies, why did it continue this practice? Your guess is as good as mine - politics? Giving a dog a bad name so as to kill it?

The disgracefu­l infighting amongst our so-called elite security agencies, which has led to washing of their dirty linens in the public, is a huge embarrassm­ent to not only the Federal Government but to Nigerians in general. Let me leave this for future discuss, but suffice it to note that the Osinbajo Panel and President Buhari should heed the warnings of Prof. Bolaji Akinyemi on this matter.

For those who have not read the Sunday piece by the respected foreign affairs professor and former minister, let me quote some paragraphs.

“External intelligen­ce officers, otherwise called spies, do not operate under the same operationa­l penalties as domestic intelligen­ce officers.

“Under no circumstan­ces should the report of the panel, in as far as it relates to the activities of the NIA, be made public, and no more leaks from the panel. Normally, foreign intelligen­ce activities are shrouded in secrecy and not in the glare of publicity.”

“Countries go to incredible lengths to hide the identities of their agents, both domestic and foreign, and their operations. No receipts get issued. Budgets are called black budgets because they are never publicly acknowledg­ed.”

The CBN, since its founding in 1958, has been paying out cash to government and its agencies to fund various operations, whether they are covert or otherwise. This practice has been standard under all presidents, including this one. The CBN, since the past leadership of Roy Pentelow Fenton, through Clement Isong, Adamu Ciroma, Paul Ogwuma, Lamido Sanusi and now Godwin Emefiele, at various times, has paid out millions of dollars in cash to the Federal Government and security agencies to fund one operation or another. In fact, I gathered that Nigeria’s last interventi­on in The Gambia that led to the eventual peaceful ousting of strongman, Yahyah Jammeh from power in January, was funded by tens of millions of dollars in cash provided by the CBN to the Defence/NSA.

My point is, we must stop this silly culture of destroying the integrity of our revered institutio­ns because of selfish interests and agendas. If any person or group wants to take up issues with how Nigeria’s funds are being spent, then it must channel that effort to the right office and not the CBN. The CBN is just a bank - it has a civic and constituti­onal duty to pay when a mandate is presented with all approving signatorie­s verified, and of course with the account holders’ account funded accordingl­y.

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