The
Central Bank of Nigeria on Wednesday re-instated the eight banks banned last
week from operating in the country’s foreign exchange market.
The CBN
Director, Banking Supervision Department, Tokunbo Martins, announced the
reinstatement of the banks, after a meeting between chief executive officers of
the affected banks and the Committee of Governors of the CBN under the auspices
of the Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (CIBN).
Mrs.
Martins said the decision was taken after the CEOs presented an acceptable plan
to repay all the outstanding dollars in respect of the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation (NNPC)/Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) deposits in
their possession to the Treasury Single Account (TSA).
“We have
had engagements with the body of CEOs over a number of banks suspended from
participation in foreign exchange market. I’m happy to say the ban has been
lifted on the banks. As a result, all those banks have been reinstated into
foreign exchange market,” Mrs. Martins said
Managing
Director of Access Bank Plc, Herbert Wigwe, who spoke on behalf of the affected
banks’ CEOs, said the banks pledged to uphold the re-payment plan.
Last
week,the CBN suspended nine commercial banks from further dealing in foreign
exchange transactions in the country over infractions on its directives on the
TSA remittances.
The banks
were found guilty of refusing to remit to the TSA over $2.12 billion revenue
realised from the operations of the NNPC.
The United
Bank for Africa (UBA) was later re-admitted to the market after it refunded
over $530 million unremitted NNPC/NLNG FOREX deposits in its possession.
Those
unbanned on Wednesday are First Bank of Nigeria (FBN) ($469 million); Diamond
Bank Plc ($287 million); Sterling Bank Plc ($269 million); Skye Bank Plc ($221
million); Fidelity Bank ($209 million); Keystone Bank ($139 million); First
City Monument Bank {FCMB} ($125 million) and Heritage Bank ($85 million).
The
continued banning of the eight banks was said to have been responsible for the continued
dip in value of the Naira against the dollar and other international currencies
last week.
PREMIUM
TIMES confirmed that the nine commercial banks also failed to remit crude oil
sales revenues from oil blocks operated by the Nigerian Petroleum Development
Company (NPDC) and its joint venture (JV) partners.
The NPDC
is the upstream oil industry subsidiary of the NNPC.
Some of
the oil blocks included oil mining leases (OMLs) previously vacated by Shell
Petroleum Development Company, SPDC, included eight whose ownership were
irregularly approved by the immediate past Minister of Petroleum Resources,
Diezani Alison-Madueke.
They
included OMLs 4, 38 and 41 allocated to Atlantic Energy and Septa Energy; OML
42 to Neconde Energy and Kulcyzk Oil; OML 40 to Elcrest E&P Nigeria Limited
and Band Oil and Gas; OML 34 to Niger Delta Western and Petrolin; OML 30 to
Shoreline and Heritage Oil, and OML 26 to First Hydrocarbon Nigeria and Afren.
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