Forex: CBN rebuffs calls for Emefiele’s resignation
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has faulted claims from certain quarters for the resignation of the Governor of the apex bank, Godwin Emefiele, over issues relating to the exchange rate of the naira.
In a statement on Tuesday, the CBN Director of Communications ,Mr Osita Nwanisobi Nwanisobi alleged that those behind such calls were only pursuing their selfish agenda fuelled by those who had long benefitted from rent-seeking practices in the parallel forex market, which he refused to recognise as a significant segment of the country’s forex market.
He said that the CBN would not be distracted in its mandate by yielding to the selfish tendencies of a few to the detriment of the majority even as he urged the banking public to disregard claims aimed at impugning the reputation of the Bank, insisting that the apex bank remained committed to carrying out its mandate for the good of the Nigerian people.
Nwanisobi also assured that the CBN remained committed to meeting the foreign exchange request of travelers with legitimate needs as they related to travel allowances, payment of tuition and medical fees among other invisible.
He noted that there was enough supply of foreign exchange to the banks to meet legitimate demands for foreign exchange.
Nwanisobi, who insisted that no customer requiring foreign exchange for genuine transactions would be turned back by their banks, urged the banking public to insist on their rights to be attended to as long as they possessed all the requisite documents to validate their request.
Reiterating the stance of the CBN Governor on the willingness of the Bank to meet the demands of customers, the spokesman said the CBN would not hesitate to approve foreign exchange for customers with legitimate demands that exceeded transaction limit as long as the application was supported with specified requirements.
While restating the decision of the bank not to revisit the issue of allocation of foreign exchange to the operators of Bureau de Change, Nwanisobi argued that such a practice was not sustainable in the long run, considering that many of the BDCs had since deviated from the purpose for which they were issued licences in the first instance.
Insisting that the rate in the CBN-unrecognised parallel market was not the reference rate of the naira, Nwanisobi urged Nigerians to be wary of the activities of speculators who sought to manipulate the market for unpatriotic reasons.