LAGOS—The
stage is set for a showdown between the Governor, Central Bank of Nigeria,
CBN, Mallam Lamido Sanusi and the Presidency over when he will step down from
office. Sanusi is insisting he would remain in office till June 2 when his
tenure expires.
Sanusi’s insistence
on
staying in office till June this year followed the storm provoked by
President Goodluck Jonathan reportedly ordering him to resign as reported by a
national newspaper yesterday over allegedly leaking a letter Sanusi wrote to
him (President) claiming that $49.8bn oil revenue was missing.
Sanusi’s position
has received support from lawyers who said that the President lacks the
constitutional powers to direct the Governor of the Central Bank to resign from
office. Most of the lawyers, who spoke to Vanguard, yesterday, maintained that
only a two-third majority of the Senate can validly sack the CBN governor from
office.
The senators on
their part, however, told Vanguard that the President was yet to inform
the senate of his decision to remove Sanusi as the CBN Governor.
On their part, Economic operators called on the President to follow due process, in his attempt to remove Sanusi from office. They said while the President has the power to fire Sanusi, he should do so according to the terms and conditions of the office.
On their part, Economic operators called on the President to follow due process, in his attempt to remove Sanusi from office. They said while the President has the power to fire Sanusi, he should do so according to the terms and conditions of the office.
CBN sources
confirmed to Vanguard that Sanusi has made up his mind to resist any attempt to
force him out of office before June 2 when his tenure expires.
This position was
further confirmed by the CBN’s spokesman, Mr. Ugo Okoroafor. According to him,
Mallam Sanusi told members of the management at a meeting on Wednesday that he
would be in office till June and did not even indicate that he might
proceed on any terminal leave before completing his tenure.
Okoroafor’s
words: “He told us at the meeting we held, yesterday, that he will be
leaving in June and did not give any indication that he would proceed on
retirement leave before that time.”
Sanusi is relying on
CBN Act 2007 which defines the tenure, appointment and removal of the CBN
governor.
What the law says
Section 11(2f) of the CBN Act 2007, says: “The
Governor, Deputy Governor or Director shall cease to hold office in the Bank if
he: (a) becomes of unsound mind or, owing to ill health, is incapable of
carrying out his duties; (b) is convicted of any criminal offence by a
court of competent jurisdiction except for traffic offences or contempt
proceedings arising in connection with the execution or intended execution of
any power or duty conferred under this Act or the Banks and Other Financial
Institutions Act; (c) is guilty of a serious misconduct in relation to
his duties under this Act; (d) is disqualified or suspended from
practicing his profession in Nigeria by order of a competent authority made in
respect of him personally; (e) becomes bankrupt; (f) is removed by the
President: Provided that the removal of the Governor shall be supported by
two-thirds majority of the Senate praying that he be so removed.
Sanusi: presidency
keeps mum
The Presidency,
yesterday, kept mum over reports that the president had asked the governor of
the Central Bank of Nigeria Sanusi Lamido Sanusi to resign. Though the Special
Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Dr Reuben Abati had promised
to react to the story before the end of the day, several attempts to reach him,
last night failed.
President yet to
inform Senate
The Senate, yesterday, said it had not received any communication from President Goodluck Jonathan over his alleged plan to sack Sanusi over his role in the alleged missing $49.8 billion and so, would reserve its position on whether it would support or kick against the alleged planned action.
The Senate, yesterday, said it had not received any communication from President Goodluck Jonathan over his alleged plan to sack Sanusi over his role in the alleged missing $49.8 billion and so, would reserve its position on whether it would support or kick against the alleged planned action.
Chairman, Senate
Committee on Information and Media, Enyinaya Abaribe, told Vanguard that the
Senate would not want to be dragged into the controversial issue since there
was no correspondence from the president to that effect.
He said: “The Senate
will resume on Tuesday and we have no such information before us. Until we
resume and get communicated by Mr President on the issue, we cannot take any
position on that yet. For now, I am sure we don’t have any such information.
Until we resume and such information comes before us, we cannot as a Senate
respond to that.”
Speaking in the same
vein, Chairman, Senate Committee on Rules and Business, Ita Enang, PDP, Akwa
Ibom North East, said: “Well, I am not aware of that and so I cannot comment on
an issue I am not aware of. Besides, there is no letter or indication to
that effect to my knowledge. I cannot say anything about the leaked letter
because I do not know how all that came about. I am sure Nigerians will want to
know even as the damage has already been done.
But Senator Solomon
Ewuga, APC, Nasarawa North observed that sacking of the CBN boss was within the
purview of the president even as he refused to comment further.
“It is within the
power of Mr President and so I have nothing to contribute to that. Besides, I
don’t like telephone interview and so leave me out of that matter for now,” he
said.
Lawyers back Sanusi
Sanusi’s resistance has received the backing of legal practitioners across the country. A cross section of senior legal practitioners that spoke to Vanguard, yesterday, maintained that only a two-third majority of the Senate can validly sack the CBN governor from office. They said that the President has no such powers under the law to Sack Sanusi, adding that President Jonathan would be acting beyond his constitutionally guaranteed powers should he insist on relieving the CBN governor of his duties without recourse to due process.
Sanusi’s resistance has received the backing of legal practitioners across the country. A cross section of senior legal practitioners that spoke to Vanguard, yesterday, maintained that only a two-third majority of the Senate can validly sack the CBN governor from office. They said that the President has no such powers under the law to Sack Sanusi, adding that President Jonathan would be acting beyond his constitutionally guaranteed powers should he insist on relieving the CBN governor of his duties without recourse to due process.
Professor Itse
Sagay, SAN, said: “The CBN governor was right in his position. Although, he was
appointed by the president, however, that appointment was ratified by the
National Assembly. His removal is supposed to be ratified by the same body.
“Meanwhile, from
what we gathered, the government is making the move to remove the CBN Governor
from office because of the revelation he made on the non-remittance of oil
revenue to the federation account by some government agencies.
“The CBN governor is
due to retire in four months time, so what was the urge from the President to
want to remove him from office now by all means?”
According to
Lagos-based lawyer, Mr Festus Keyamo, “President Jonathan does not have such
powers. The CBN Governor can only be removed by two-third majority of the
Senate. Therefore, President Goodluck Jonathan will be acting illegally if
indeed there is any truth in the report that he asked the CBN Governor to
resign.”
A Senior Advocate of
Nigeria, SAN, Mr Sebastian Hon, said: “The President lacks the powers to compel
the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria,
CBN, to resign. However, if Sanusi wants to resign today he can do so on his
own. He has his tenure of employment and the procedure for removing him from
office must be followed.
“The President
cannot ask him to resign, except for good reason; he cannot be removed from
office. By the way, has the President come out to ask the CBN Governor to
resign? I have also read the Newspaper report and I think it is still
within the realm of speculation. Why don’t we wait till the President comes out
to formally ask the CBN Governor to resign? In any case, even if the President
eventually makes such request, the CBN Governor has the right to reject the
directive and insist that due process of the law must be followed.”
Likewise, another
SAN, Mr Jubrin Okutekpa, stated: “This is just like asking if President
Jonathan has the powers to ask me to leave Nigeria.
However, looking at it from another angle, President Jonathan has his
fundamental right to expression. Just the same way people have been asking him
to resign, with others, asking him not to contest election in 2015, so also has
he asked the CBN Governor to resign.
“As to whether or
not he has the power to fire the CBN Governor that will be a constitutional
issue. Are we going to gag the President from expressing himself? No! He has a
right to do so and I see the directive as a mere advice to the CBN Governor. Sanusi
has a right not to comply with the directive.
“The President can
say whatever he wants to say, but whether or not what he said has any binding
effect is another issue. It is my view that the President asking the CBN
Governor to resign has no constitutional effect on the CBN Governor. I
see it as an advice that can be ignored.
Ladi Williams, SAN,
however expressed a different view. He said: “The CBN governor holds the
office at the pleasure of Mr. President; it is not an elective office. The
president is being polite, requesting for his resignation, and he too should do
the rightful and resign honourably. For whatever reasons the President had
for asking him to go, that is now left for the president to decide. Public
office is not office of anybody’s father, people come and go. Until people are
forced to leave the office, they don’t do things honorably. As far as I am
concerned he does not need any ratification from the Senate.
“The question I will
pose is why are Africans like this? For the mere fact that the man is Mr.
President, he should respect that office and resign honorably. Whether the
President has good reasons or not, that does not matter. Suppose the man asked
him not to step into the office, what would happen. Can he do that to President
Olusegun Obasanjo, or can he try it with General Obasanjo? This is happening
because the President is a complete gentleman.”
Economic operators
call for caution, due process
On their part,
economic experts said that while the President has the power to fire Sanusi, he
should do so according to the terms and conditions of the office. They,
however, noted that the confrontation between the CBN Governor and the
President was not good for the image of the country in the international
community.
Managing Director, RiskGuard
Africa, Mr. Yemi Soladoye said that President Jonathan can only operate
within the section of the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN’s
Act that deals with appointment and retirement of the CBN governor. According
to Soladoye, the President has the power to appoint or fire any CBN governor
based on the dictates of the CBN Act.
Maxi Okechukwu
Unegbu, Managing Director/Chief Executive, Maxifund Securities Limited, also
said that the President should have reported Sanusi to the National Assembly
instead of asking him to resign.
According to Opeyemi
Agabaje, Managing Director/Chief Executive, RTC Advisory Services Limited, the
confrontation between the President and the CBN Governor was not good for the
image of the country. “It is not good. The idea that the CBN Governor and the
President are fighting is not good for our image in the international
community.”
National President
of the Association of Nigeria Licensed Customs Agents (ANLCA), Prince Olayiwola
Shittu, said that government should be careful in its pronouncements concerning
the economy of the country so as not to make Nigeria
a laughing stack in the comity of nations. He explained that the decision to
ask the CBN boss to step down should be in line with the terms of his
appointment, otherwise the country will be portrayed a nation that is not
serious.
Similarly, Mr.
Gbadebo Olatokunbo, Shareholders Activist and a founding member of Nigeria
Shareholders Solidarity Association (NSSA) said: “It is very serious and
dangerous for our economy for the CBN Governor to be sacked. This is a red
signal to the world if it happens. The demand for the resignation of the
CBN Governor is uncalled for because the Governor will soon leave the office. Nigeria
will be in danger if that happens.
Chief Timothy
Adesina, President, Nigerian Shareholders Solidarity Association (NSSA) said:
“The position of Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is very delicate and
sensitive because it can send negative signal to the international community
about financial sector and economy.
Godwin Anono,
Chairman, Professional Shareholders Association of Nigeria said: “The
President has the right to hire and fire. If he feels that the person he hired
does not perform to his expectation, he can decide to sack the person by
recommending to the National Assembly for its ratification.The President
and CBN Governor are like master and servant. So the President has the
right to do so. It is not a big deal to sack the CBN Governor provided there
are concrete evidences backing it.”
Mr. Erem O Erem,
Director, Valueline Securities & Investment, Limited, said, the” CBN
Governor can be sacked when he is not performing or behaving as expected. He is
a civil servant under a Ministry of Finance, though with some level of
autonomy. The Governor talks too much and must be cautioned given his
position.”
Mr. Boniface Okezie,
Chairman, Progressive Shareholders Association of Nigeria, said: “The
President alone cannot remove Sanusi. He cannot do it without recourse to the
senate. The President had the opportunity to remove Sanusi when he
assumed office as the President of Nigeria. But he did not do it.”
Some operators,
however, insisted that the President’s request for Sanusi’s resignation was in
order. President, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry, LCCI, Alhaji
Remi Bello, said: “President Jonathan appointed Sanusi as the CBN governor; he
has the right to tell him to resign so that the economy is not jeopardized in a
way. Sanusi is not in the middle of his tenure as the CBN governor, he is
almost at the end of his term,” he said.
The LCCI chief,
however, predicts that although Sanusi’s exit might affect the exchange
rate of the naira to other currencies until a new appointee comes on board, yet
interest rate may not change because it is unilaterally decided by the Monetary
Policy Committee (MPC).
Similarly, Sir Sunny
Nwosu, National Coordinator, Independent Shareholders Association of Nigeria
(ISAN), said: “The removal of CBN Governor is long overdue. We the ISAN had
called on the President before now for his removal.
Don’t suspend
Sanusi; APC advises FG
The All Progressives
Congress (APC) has advised President Goodluck Jonathan to tread softly on his
reported plan to force Sanusi to resign, because of the impact such will
have on the nation’s economy.
In a statement
issued in Lagos, yesterday, by its Interim National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji
Lai Mohammed, the party said asking Sanusi to step down, on the basis of an
allegation that he leaked the letter he wrote to the President, over the
unremitted $49.8 billion oil revenue, does not bode well for an economy that is
alread on crutches.
It warned that any
move to suspend Sanusi and use security forces to prevent him from entering his
office, as reported by the media, will even be worse, because it will mean that
the President is willing to circumvent the provision of the law that the
Governor of the CBN can only be removed by two-thirds of the Senate membership.
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