Daily Trust Saturday

Cash capture and ‘nudity’ of Nigerian depositors

- Oludayo Tade Dr Tade, a sociologis­t, wrote via dotad2003@yahoo.com

About two weeks ago, the video of a semi-nude, light-skinned woman went viral on the internet. She was inside a bank to access her money but could not achieve her goal. After efforts to achieve her aim failed, there was nothing more to hide – she stripped herself. She lamented her inability to withdraw her money which had made her children miss school for two days. Left with bra and pants, this woman protested and angrily demanded that her account be closed and her deposit released to her.

Few days later, the video of a man totally naked inside another bank went viral. Blended with messages of hopelessne­ss and the futility of efforts to access his savings to save his wife and children from dying from ill-health and hunger, the nudemale protester proclaimed that he was frustrated to go unclothed after he had appealed to top executives of that bank without result. He wanted his 520, 000 which he saved with the bank released to him.

He said “Give me my money let me go. You’ve frustrated me. You’ve frustrated me. Give me my money. My wife is in the hospital…about to die. There is nothing again. How old are my children? Seven years, four years…give me my money. I don taya!”

And when a policeman was brought in, he said “If una wan shoot me, shoot me make I die. Let them bury me make I forget the problems. Make dem shoot me make I die…. make I forget my wife, make I forget my children…make una shoot me. Give me my money let me go. If you see me here again, kill me. Let me go and take care of my family.”

Semi-nude or total nude protests are not exclusive to Nigeria. It has been reported in Zimbabwe, Australia, South Africa, London and the United States of America. Where getting justice in law courts becomes difficult, people are likely to resort to protest to show displeasur­e and their unpleasant experience­s on their inability to move, purchase goods and withdraw money just because the Central Bank of Nigeria with the approval of President Muhammadu Buhari decided to redesign three denominati­ons of the naira - 200, 500 and 1000.

The redesigned naira has become a scarce commodity; trading more in black market by becoming the most important currency in present-day Nigeria.

Protesting nude in the banking hall positions the human body as a symbolic object of negotiatio­n which can be used in different places of power and influence for contestati­ons. By protesting nude, these depositors did not only show they have nothing again to hide, they also show how government policies affect the downtrodde­n who save little for trading and survival. It further shows the weaponizat­ion of the body for the extraction of action, sympathy and to ultimately halt an unpleasant event.

Despite the fact that people in the banking halls were more interested in recording, observing and sharing their nude videos than covering them, the nude protesters challenged institutio­nal authoritie­s and imposed themselves on spaces they would not have dared. They represent millions of Nigerians who were tricked to deposit their money into the formal banking system before they were literally stripped, disempower­ed and rendered beggars to access their own monies. Fuel is scarce and expensive. Fuel stations are demanding cash but CBN wants us to go cash-less without sufficient awareness and infrastruc­ture to support such transition.

The civil disobedien­ce and protests which started last week, sadly with destructio­n of properties and loss of lives are pointers to the strains which the policy is causing the ordinary man. What digital infrastruc­ture has the CBN put in place for smooth transition to digital payment systems? How do we strengthen security to check frauds and cybercrime­s? How will people who cannot withdraw the new legal tender eat, transport themselves and perform other mandatory roles in their lives?

Nigeria needs to learn how Kenya and countries in the global North are achieving this feat. India started this policy around 2016-2017 which they called demonetiza­tion with almost similar objectives as Nigeria. Today, it is experienci­ng remonetiza­tion with cash everywhere. How do we ensure that those in hospitals and need care are not allowed to die because of loopholes in a currency redesign policy? Most Nigerians are struggling to deal with mental health issues that come with this financial disruption. They are literally ‘naked’ and left vulnerable to black market operators. The policy implementa­tion strategy needs urgent review. We must learn to adopt measures that make life easy for our citizens when implementi­ng good policies.

The naira redesign policy of the President Muhammadu Buhari Federal government implemente­d by the Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Godwin Emefiele, failed to appreciate the unintended consequenc­es that come with the policy by not anticipati­ng the massive informal economy that thrives on cash. The primacy of cash for economic, social and cultural uses in Nigeria needs to be appreciate­d in making interventi­ons. In an internatio­nal study with my colleague, the Acting Head of Marketing and Consumer Studies, University of Ibadan, Dr Oluwatosin Adeniyi, we found that uptake of digital naira in Nigeria was low because it failed to add anything new to the functions already served by existing payment systems. Indeed, we found that fear of fraud in digital transactio­n, large informal economy based on cash, and poor digital infrastruc­ture to support transition affects the uptake of digital naira and affects the drive for financial inclusion.

Every policy must first understand what problem exists before designing interventi­on. In the case of Nigeria, we have the cash-dependent, less

cash-dependent and digital users within the financial space. Product and policy design must factor in these end-users. We cannot have one sizefits-all policy if our aim is indeed to include all and not exclude people. Poor understand­ing or appreciati­on of the variety of financial product users (including the financial literacy level and rural unbanked populace) is what is driving the present crisis occasioned by the naira redesign policy.

You cannot aim to drive financial inclusion by fraudulent­ly bringing people in and denying them access to their money. What the CBN is doing is the tyranny of intermedia­ry control and denial, a strategy used to lure people to deposit old naira into banks with the intention of not giving them access to their money. It may also pass for cash seizure, cash-arrest, cashkidnap­ping or cash abduction simply because the owners now have to pay ‘ransom’ to be able to access a fraction of their money, usually at a loss!

The ongoing crisis should teach the CBN that they underestim­ated the importance of cash in the financial ecosystem of Nigeria and failed to prepare for this backlash.

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