THISDAY

HURIWA Kicks against Movement of Selected CBN Department­s to Lagos

Alleges decision politicall­y motivated

- Chuks Okocha in Abuja

Prominent civil rights advocacy group, the Human Rights Writers Associatio­n of Nigeria (HURIWA) has opposed the plan by the new Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Mr. Olayemi Cardoso, to transfer some department­s of the apex bank to Lagos.

The rights group said the decision was political and was reminiscen­t of the “notoriousl­y petty politics” that go on in some states of the federation whereby governors newly elected and sworn-in, rapidly move state universiti­es to their local government areas.

Besides, HURIWA argued that it makes no logical sense to say that the attempt to decongest the Abuja headquarte­rs of the CBN was a reason for transferri­ng department­s of the CBN to Lagos.

It added that that same reason of over-congestion of the entire Lagos state was why the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) was set up in the first place by law, which is subsisting and binding on all persons and authoritie­s as Nigeria's federal capital and seat of government.

The rights group in a statement by the National Coordinato­r, Emmanuel Onwubiko, said the decision by the new CBN chief was tantamount to disrespect­ing section 298 of the constituti­on of Nigeria which states unambiguou­sly that the FCT shall be the capital of the federation and seat of government of the federation.

HURIWA argued that the enabling Act that set up the CBN prescribed the legal functions to include being the official banker of the government of the federation.

It argued that this emphatical­ly means that the CBN must be domiciled wherever the seat of government is located by law, which for now is Abuja.

It described the reason given for the plan to move some department­s to Lagos as puerile and laughable.

HURIWA accused Cardoso of executing ethnic agenda by attempting to move strategic department­s of the CBN to his state of origin which is Lagos.

It wondered that if the erstwhile governor of CBN for almost a decade, Mr. Godwin Emefiele had moved some department­s to Asaba, the Delta State capital, which is his state of origin, whether the Lagos-born CBN governor will still have other department­s to move to Lagos as being contemplat­ed.

HURIWA urged the CBN chief executive to perish what it said was a politicall­y toxic plot because it will be very a dangerous precedent.

The rights group said the new leadership of the CBN, by planning to move department­s of the bank to Lagos was dragging the hand of the clock backwards in Nigeria.

It recalled that some staff members of the bank had reportedly resisted the transfer and claimed that it is motivated by tribal sentiment.

The group argued that all department­s of CBN headquarte­rs must be in Abuja while those staff already in the Lagos office should be instructed to handle assignment­s involving banks based in Lagos.

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