THISDAY

As Court Okays Arrest of Naira Abusers

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The recent conviction of an actress, Oluwadaras­imi Omoseyin, by Justice Chukwujekw­u Aneke of the Federal High Courtmarks­asignifica­ntstepforw­ardinthe effortsoft­heEconomic­andFinanci­alCrimes Commission (EFCC), and the Independen­t Corrupt and Other Related Offences Com- mission (ICPC) to curb the inappropri­ate culture of spraying and stepping on naira notes during social functions in the country.

Omoseyinwa­sarrestedb­ytheLagosZ­onal Command of EFCC after she was caught on video spraying money at an occasion.

At the time of the offence, there was a severe scarcity of naira notes due to the Central Bank’s withdrawal of old 200, 500, and 1,000 naira notes from circulatio­n, re- placing them with newly designed versions that were difficult to obtain.

She was later arraigned on February 13, 2023, on a two-count charge, to which she pleaded “not guilty” and was subsequent­ly granted bail on February 15, 2023.

Later she changed her “not guilty” plea to “guilty.” Following her guilty plea, Justice Aneke accordingl­y sentenced the defendant to six months in jail, with the option to pay a fine of N300,000. The judge said the amountshou­ldbepaidin­totheFeder­ation’s Consolidat­ed revenue account.

In Nigeria, spraying of naira notes at social events is rampant. But despite the legal provision criminalis­ing such action, relevant security agencies always look the other way when these offences are committed.

For instance, Section 21(3) of the CBN Act 2007 (as amended) clearly stipulates that spraying or matching on the naira during social occasions or otherwise shall constitute an abuse punishable under subsection (1).

However, at social functions, politician­s, celebritie­s and captains of industry are seen contraveni­ng the law with impunity.

Even sub-section (1) also states that it is an offence for any person to hawk, sell or otherwise trade in the naira notes, but such practice is rampant on the streets and parties, with many hawking naira with complete impunity.

Recently, a viral video depicted a traditiona­l ruler adorning a popular Fuji musician with knitted N1,000 notes fashioned into a long piece of jewellery at an event, yet no arrests were made.

With the EFCC’s commenceme­nt of legal proceeding­s against Omoseyin, there’s optimism that they will diligently pursue similar cases to effectivel­y address this societal issue.

 ?? ?? Olukayode
Olukayode

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