The
suspended Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Mr. Lamido Sanusi,
has described the allegations of financial recklessness levelled against
him by the Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria as a malicious and
calculated attempt to mislead President Goodluck Jonathan into believing
that the management of the bank is guilty of misconduct and
recklessness.
In what can be described as his first
official response to the allegations, Sanusi, in a letter to Jonathan,
said that contrary to the claims by the Presidency that he was asked to
respond to issues raised in the FRCN report, he only saw the “Briefing
Note” of the council for the first time when it was attached to his
suspension letter.
In the letter, sent to the President on
March 10, a copy of which was made available to journalists on Sunday,
the suspended governor said at no time were the allegations in the
report sent to the CBN either by the President or the FRCN for comments
or explanations.
He said, “On Wednesday March 10, 2014, I
submitted a memorandum to His Excellency, Mr. President, with
supporting documentation, effectively addressing all the allegations
contained in the FRCN Briefing Note, the letter of suspension and the
Akingbola petition.
“Having submitted my response to the
President, I am further compelled, following the recent press briefing
and comments by the Senior Special Adviser to the President on Media as
well as numerous other references to the allegations in both local,
international and online media, to put to the public my responses in the
interest of transparency, accountability and my responsibility to the
Nigerian people.
“Let me also state that I saw the FRCN
Briefing Note for the first time when it was attached to the suspension
letter. At no time was this report sent to the CBN either by the
President or the FRCN for comments or explanations.
“A careful examination of the
allegations contained in the FRCN Briefing Note to Mr President, will
show that each of the allegations could easily have been resolved by a
simple request for clarification or more careful review.
“There is no doubt that if the CBN had
received the Briefing Note, which was prepared in June 2013, all the
misconceptions, misrepresentations and erroneous inferences contained
therein would have been cleared.
“I am publishing these responses to
enable the general public see that each and every allegation levelled
against the CBN under my leadership is false and unfounded, and that
many of the allegations were malicious and fabricated, having been
designed to mislead the President into believing that the management of
the central bank was guilty of misconduct and recklessness.”
On the allegations of fraudulent
takeover of the defunct Intercontinental Bank Plc by the former Managing
Director, Mr. Erastus Akingbola, Sanusi described them as baseless.
He said, “As for the Akingbola petition,
it is a rehash of the baseless allegations he has been making since
2010, which apparently he must have been asked to reproduce on February
9, 10 days before the suspension.
“It is, indeed, strange that the CBN
governor can be suspended based on allegations written by a man who ran
his bank into the ground and against whom judgement has been obtained in
a London court, and who furthermore is facing criminal prosecution at
home for offences, including criminal theft.”
The governor, in providing specific
responses to all the allegations levelled against him and the central
bank management, faulted all the claims by the FRCN in its report.
For instance, on the allegation of weak
corporate governance at the CBN on account of the fact that the office
of the governor is fused with that of the Chairman of the Board of
Directors, Sanusi said the FRCN ignored the fact that global best
practice was that the governor of the central bank was also the chairman
of the board.
This, according to him, is currently the practice in about 55 countries.
On the allegation that the CBN’s
breakdown of “Currency Issue Expenses” for 2011 and 2012 indicated that
it paid the Nigerian Security Printing and Minting Plc N38.233bn in 2011
for printing of banknotes, whereas the entire turnover of the company
was N29.370bn, the suspended governor said the expense item of N38.233bn
comprised N28.738bn payment to the NSPMP in 2011; N6.587bn accrued
liability in 2011 but paid in 2012 when deliveries were received; and
N2.829bn audit adjustment journal entry into the account at the end of
2011 in respect of prepayments to the company.
“Evidently, the difference between the
numbers in the financial statements of the CBN and NSPMP is a simple
reflection of timing differences between recognition of expenses by the
CBN and income recognition by the NSPMP, with both entities applying
conservative accounting policies,” he added.
PUNCHNG
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