Goodluck Jonathan |
A
former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Prof. Chukwuma Soludo, has
accused former President Goodluck Jonathan of turning the CBN into the
Presidency’s Automated Teller Machine to produce cash for the government.
He
also said the Jonathan administration ran the bank like a movie plot from
Uganda under the late dictator, Idi Amin Dada.
Idi
Amin ruled Uganda with an iron fist between 1971 and 1979, and has been described
as one of the most corrupt African rulers.
In an interview in the current business edition of The Interview, Soludo described the CBN as
“the ATM of the Presidency,” under Jonathan.
He said it was regrettable that in spite of the bank’s
statutory independence, it continued to be a victim of high wire politics,
often “electrocuting” its leadership.
Soludo said, “Recent revelations regarding the ‘arms-gate’
(short for the $2.1bn scandal involving the former National Security Adviser,
Sambo Dasuki) and the apparent abuse of the CBN as an ATM by the Presidency
should get reasonable people thinking.
“Imagine a scenario where a President can order the CBN to
create an intervention fund for national stability and the CBN literally
‘prints’ say, N3tn, and doles it out as cash to the President to prosecute an
election campaign, or for just about anything he fancies. It is a scary
thought.
“We are going down a dangerous path that ruins the economy. I
don’t know any other country where such is tolerated, except perhaps what I
watched in a movie about Idi Amin and his governor of the central bank.”
The former CBN governor, according to a statement by the
Managing Director/Editor-In-Chief of The
Interview, Mr. Azu Ishiekwene, is one of the 10 leading business
lights featured in the current edition of the magazine, which provides insights
into opportunities and threats in business this year, ranging from
manufacturing and power, to banking and investment, small businesses,
advertising and jobs.
In the same edition of the magazine, the President,
Manufacturers Association of Nigeria, Dr. Frank Jacobs, identified foreign
exchange restrictions, infrastructure and high cost of business as the three
biggest challenges to the nation’s economy.
The way forward, he said, “Is to look inwards for the supply
of raw materials, prudent management and professionalisation of the workforce.”
Jacobs advised against increased taxes, recommending instead
a “widening of the tax net” to improve government revenue.
Also featured are the Managing Director of the Asset
Management Corporation of Nigeria, Mr. Ahmed Kuru; the Group Managing Director,
Fidelity Bank Plc, Mr. Nnamdi Okonkwo; Chief Executive Officer, Capital Assets,
Mr. Ariyo Olushekun; Chief Executive Officer, Complete Communications, Mr.
Sunny Obazu-Ojeagbase; and one of the founders of Jobberman, Mr. Opeyemi
Owoyemi, among others.
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