CBN sources reveal how it operated accounts for Sambo Dasuki & other government agencies
Following
allegations in some quarters that the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, was
turned into a cash machine during the immediate past administration of
Goodluck Jonathan, top officials of the bank have denied such claims,
lamenting that the apex bank is being unduly vilified by those who do
not understand how the bank relates with its clients, which are mostly
government agencies.
Explaining how the CBN works, they stated
that when a payment mandate (being instrument to withdraw money) is
issued by a client, which can be a government agency or department that
operates an account with the apex bank, it will look at such mandate to
ensure that the signature tallies with that of the signatory before any
dime from such agency’s money can be moved.
“Once this is
ascertained, the bank will also check to see that there is enough money
in the account before paying; not minding whether the person wants it in
cash or electronic transfer. However the person wants it, the apex bank
has no option than to pay,” said an official, who added that “the bank
is not an auditor, neither is it an anti-corruption police to pry into
what the money is meant for or whether the money will be judiciously
utilized.”
Another
top official of the bank said: “If for instance, you take a cheque to
the bank and you present the cheque to the teller, the teller takes the
cheque, looks at it, looks into the account, looks at the signature to
verify that it is the same one on file, having also examined your ID,
they pay you. Before they pay you, they are not going to ask what the
money is being meant for; neither will they ask you to bring
documentation to prove that you have done the contract for which the
money is meant.
“Just like individuals have current accounts with
commercial banks that is how these agencies have accounts with the CBN.
Just like these current account holders write cheques that is how these
agencies write mandates requesting CBN to pay out certain sums. When
such mandates get to the CBN, it looks at it, examines it to see that
the authorizing officer is the one that approved the mandate and once
these things have been certified, we (CBN) will have to pay from that
agency’s account.”
It would be recalled that in the wake of
revelations emanating from the ongoing probe of the alleged looting of
public funds meant for the procurement of arms to boost the military’s
offensive against Boko Haram insurgents, for which a former National
Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki and few others have been indicted, the
CBN has been understood by a section of Nigerians to have acted in
concert with Dasuki in distributing the nation’s commonwealth to some
well-heeled Nigerians.
Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji
Lai Mohammed, had stated that: “If there was still any honour left
among thieves, there is no way the leaders of a party (PDP) under whose
watch the nation’s economy suffered a monumental mismanagement and the
Central Bank was turned to the ATM or piggy bank of a few people will
have the temerity to insult a government that is working hard to turn
things around or the citizens who are bearing the brunt of such
mismanagement.”
CBN
officials, however, insist that there is a need for people to
understand the relationship it has with clients such as: NIMASA, NNPC,
DSS, ONSA, the Senate, including the Office of the Accountant-General of
the Federation, among others.
“These are all agencies that
operate an account with the CBN and the accounts are managed by the
Banking and Payment Department of the CBN. The agencies’ accounts are
funded, if there’s no money in their account, we will have to bounce
such mandates,” another source added.
“I must emphasize that the
CBN is not honouring such mandates from its own resources; it is only
doing so from those agencies funds it is holding for them in their own
account. There is a lot of ignorance out there. The money the CBN paid
out (in Dasuki’s case) is not CBN’s money.”
Buttressing her point
with the disbursement of the recovered Abacha loot, the central banker
explained that “the money was in the account that belongs to the FG. The
only signatory to that account is that Accountant-General of the
Federation. The then Finance Minister, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala wrote a memo
asking the President to approve that the money be moved from the Federal
Government account to the account of the Office of the National
Security Adviser.”
“After former President Jonathan approved it,
the person that gave the mandate for that money to be moved was the AGF.
He sent a mandate to the CBN. It was based on that mandate that the CBN
moved the $300m and the 5.5m Pounds from the account of the Federal
Government, where this Abacha money was, to the NSA. That was how the
NSA was able to have access to the money. The CBN simply paid based on
an authorized mandate,” she added.
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