Business Day (Nigeria)

Keep up with the work, readers tell Businessda­y in face of CBN attack

- LOLADE AKINMURELE

Readers of BusinessDa­y have been calling by telephone and sending text and mail messages of support for the ground-breaking work the newspaper is doing to hold the powerful and those in authority accountabl­e.

It followed the response by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to the story published by Businessda­y in which the Nigeria Economic Summit Group (NESG), the leading private sector think-tank, called on President Muhammadu Buhari not to sign a new bill seeking to expand the powers of the government of the apex bank under the Bank and Other Financial Institutio­ns Bill now awaiting presidenti­al assent.

Rather than respond to the concerns raised, the CBN took to attacking the group and the newspaper for seeking to question the law.

In one of the messages to Businessda­y, a reader said, “It will be interestin­g to see what the reaction from the president himself will be. The NESG letter was sent to him, not to Emefiele. Yet, it is Emefiele that is taking the NESG’S pushback as a personal affront and lashing out blindly. Speaks great volumes... and it needs to be addressed frontally. CBN is not Godwin Emefiele’s personal estate. It is a public trust and must be open AT ALL TIMES to scrutiny, questionin­g and enlightenm­ent. Businessda­y should not back down on asking a CBN that is becoming an alternativ­e government, to be accountabl­e.”

Another Businessda­y reader said, “The points raised by NESG in its letter about which the CBN has gone wild are so, so germane that a responsibl­e leadership would have first deeply reflected on the issues and thereafter seek to meet with NESG team to articulate a joint response to those issues in the interest of the overall economy. I am very angry that this is what we get from an important organisati­on like the

CBN. Power indeed corrupts.”

Yet another Businessda­y reader said he read “this belligeren­t response from the central bank that failed to answer genuine questions raised by concerned and committed associatio­n of businesses and who are the real engine of economic growth in Nigeria”.

“I continue to be disappoint­ed in this CBN with their display of infallibil­ity while there are abundance of evidence to the contrary. The leadership of CBN seems to believe that all other Nigerians should go to hell once they have ingratiate­d themselves to the president and his handlers,” another Businessda­y reader said.

According to yet another reader, “On a realistic basis, it is easy to see the moral hazard into which the FGN has put itself. The Government is betting heavily on CBN financing the N2.3 trillion Economic Sustainabi­lity Plan. Is this Bill payback to CBN, a case of he who pays the piper?”

“The CBN attack is the classic Trumpian method,” said another reader. “You attack the messenger instead of responding to the substance of the message. You guys at Businessda­y should take solace and be strengthen­ed in what happened with the FT and Wirecard. Wirecard has now collapsed in the face of all and those in authority in Germany who mocked the FT reports can now see for themselves. In the end, the truth will come out. Just stand in there, bullying and intimidati­on will work but for just only a little time.”

A senior economist with a developmen­t institutio­n told Businessda­y he was shocked that a CBN filled with economists would issue a press statement responding to the matters raised by the NESG in such a manner.

“On the matter of ‘immunity’, even if the clause was already present in the current version of the Acts, the questions raised by NESG are valid. Should a regulator be immune from court processes?” the economist said.

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