LAGOS — LAGOS— Vanguard , your
best-read
newspaper, 23 March 2009, did a world exclusive on alleged plot by a
group of
individuals to take over five banks in the country.
Two weeks ago, the new Central Bank of
Nigeria
Governor, Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi sacked the chief executives and
boards of
five banks, therefore confirming our scoop of March 23.
The story:ANTI-CONSOLIDATION forces
have
regrouped with the hope of dismantling the structures and forcing a
takeover of
the top five banks in the country, Vanguard can now reveal. The grand
plan by
the group is to cause panic and uncertainty in the industry and make
the target
banks look unsafe for depositors
Meantime, indications emerged
yesterday that
the Federal Government may announce the names of a new Governor of the
Central
Bank (CBN) and the Auditor-General of the Federation (AGF) in April
just a few
weeks before the tenure of the incumbents run out.
However, the Arewa Consultative Forum
(ACF)
has expressed concern over what it described as the rapidly
deteriorating
liquidity situation in the banking industry and tasked the Central Bank
(CBN)
to make public information on causes of the development as well as the
scale of
the crisis.

Vanguard
investigations revealed that the aim of the
anti-consolidation forces is to cause loss of public confidence in the
banking
industry and compel the Federal Government to move in by injecting
funds.
Further, they ultimately plan to nstigate government to take
equity
holdings in the targeted banks.
Vanguard gathered that the group at
work is
made up of former bank owners who lost out during the consolidation
exercise, a
powerful clique in the present government, and some aggrieved persons
in three of
the six geopolitical zones in the country who felt left out in the
consolidation exercise.
Presidency sources disclosed that
those who
felt left out in the consolidation exercise are up in arms to recoup
what they
felt they lost during Obasanjo years.
Part of the plans hatched by the
group is to
ensure that the incumbent Governor of the Central Bank, Professor
Chukwuma
Soludo, does not get a second term. The plan is also to ensure that
whatever
gains consolidation recorded are discredited.
This, it was learnt, was meant to
force the
President to act quickly in the matter of appointment of a successor to
Soludo
as they anticipate that the president’s slow move may scuttle their
dreams and
cause the renewal of Soludo’s re-appointment for a second term.
The group’s second game plan is to
make
Nigerian banks look unsafe in the eye of the banking public. Part of
the game
is to spread rumours that some banks are unsound and are on the verge
of
collapse. They send out text messages to individuals and account
holders
passing wrong information on their target banks. At the moment, the
group’s
target is one of the high-flying new generation banks where they have
sent out
several messages.
New CBN Gov, Auditor-General to emerge April
The tenure of the CBN Governor,
Professor
Chukwuma Soludo and Auditor-General of the Federation, Mr. O. R.
Ejenavi from
Delta State will lapse in May 2009.
Naming nominees for the top jobs,
according
to a presidency source, will afford the Senate ample opportunity to
work on
them before they assume office.
While Soludo will complete his first
term in
office as CBN governor by May 29, Ejenavi will be due for retirement on
age
grounds on May 18.
However, among those being considered
for the
position of CBN governor include the Minister of National Planning, Dr
Shamsuddeen Usman from Kano, who was a former Finance minister and
deputy
governor at the apex bank; another former CBN deputy governor, Obadiah
Mailafia
from Nassarawa, Mallam Isa Hayatudeen from Borno, a former managing
director of
FSB International Bank, incumbent Managing Director of First Bank,
Mallam
Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, also from Kano, and Mallam Falalu Bello from
Kaduna,
Managing Director, Unity Bank.
But the most touted name so far is
that of
Mallam Isa Yuguda, the Bauchi State governor who won election on the
platform
of the All Nigeria peoples Party, ANPP, but defected to the ruling PDP
last
week. Yuguda is also an in-law of President Umaru Yar’Adua. Yuguda was
also a
former Managing Director of Inland Bank, a legacy bank in
post-consolidation
FinBank.
Past CBN governors include late Dr.
Clement
Isong (Akwa-Ibom), Alhaji Adamu Ciroma (Yobe); Mr. Ola Vincent (Lagos),
late
Alhaji Abdulkadir Ahmed (Bauchi); Mr. Paul Ogwuma (Abia), Dr. Joseph
Sanusi
(Ondo) and the current Professor Charles Soludo (Anambra).
It was also gathered that strict
obedience to
civil service rules will be observed in the appointment of a new
Auditor
General for the Federation going by the constitutional provision.
Section 86 Subsection 1 of the 1999
constitution states: “the Auditor-General for the Federation shall be
appointed
by the President on the recommendation of the Federal Civil Service
Commission,
subject to the confirmation of the Senate.”
That of the CBN may be determined by
other
factors, mostly political considerations which are at the pleasure of
the
President without recourse to the commission.
The most senior director in the
office of the
Auditor-General currently is Mr. Ogunsina G.F from Ekiti State who may
be
appointed unless there is political maneuvering. Having been a director
since
2004, it may not be smooth sailing for Ogunsina because, there is
another
senior civil servant Mr. Osonuga T. A. from Ogun State who was promoted
a
director in 2007 and is being propelled by other forces to occupy the
office.
A CBN official who spoke on condition
of
anonymity said that it is unfortunate that top five banks are the
target. The
banks, he said, are sound. The CBN had mistaken in the past the ongoing
move as
de-marketing by competitors in the banking industry, saying it is
unhealthy
competition.
The group is using this means to make
depositors panic and undertake massive withdrawal of funds from the
targeted
banks in an attempt to cause liquidity problem in the bank. In that
state they
hope to cause a take over by the government which may buy a stake in
the bank
and later sell to members of the privileged group who may be appointed
in the
interim into the board of the banks.
Arewa worries over liquidity problem
However, the Arewa Consultative Forum
(ACF)
expressed concern over what it described as the rapidly deteriorating
liquidity
situation in the banking industry and tasked the Central Bank (CBN) to
inform
the people the cause of the development as well as the scale of the
crisis.
ACF said that the commercial banks
must have
obviously lent too much money to people who either invested them in
buying
stocks or in the importation of petroleum products in the country, but
are
unable to repay such loans.
A statement signed by the National
Publicity
Secretary of the Forum, Mr. Anthony Sani however blamed the CBN for
enquiring
“into the volume of the so-called toxic assets of the commercial banks
while
refusing to tell Nigerians how or why in the first place, the banks
found
themselves in trouble.
The statement reads “The Working
Committee of
the National Executive Council of the Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF)
held its
meeting at its national headquarters in Kaduna on Tuesday, the 17th of
March
2009. In attendance were all National officers of the ACF drawn from
the 19
northern states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT). General IBM
Haruna,
the Chairman presided.
“Among other things, the meeting
reviewed and
discussed a number of issues and other troubling developments in the
country.
At the end, it resolved to issue the following statement.
“The ACF deliberated on the rapidly
deteriorating liquidity situation in the banking industry and observed
that
Nigerians are feeling increasingly frustrated by the failure of the
Central
Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to disclose the true the true nature and the
scale of the
crisis.
“Even members of the National
Assembly,
despite their best efforts, have been unable to get to the truth of the
matter.
According to Arewa consultative forum “All that seem obvious is that
our
commercial banks had lent out too much money to too many people who had
invested them in stocks or petroleum importation but who are now unable
to pay
back. Beyond that, the public has no clear idea as how or why the loans
were
given and on what terms.”
