Governor of Central
Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mallam Lamido Sanusi will proceed on retirement leave
effective April 1st 2014, two months to the end of his tenure.
It would be recalled
that President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua nominated Sanusi as Governor of the
Central Bank of Nigeria on June 1, 2009 and his appointment was confirmed
by the Senate on June 3, 2009. Hence his five year tenure is
scheduled to end on June 3rd 2014.
Contrary to
speculations that he has been forced to immediately procede on retirement
leave, investigations revealed that Sanusi will still be CBN Governor till
March 31st.
Though, when
contacted, Director of Corporate Communications, Mr. Ugo Okoroafor said he was
not aware of the CBN Governor being forced to proceed on retirement leave, a
highly placed regulatory official, who pleaded anonymity confirm that Sanusi is
scheduled to proceed on terminal leave after March 31st. He however said this
is normal, and it is not true that the Governor is being forced to proceed on
leave.
“It is a normal thing;
some people go on six months, some on three months. So, there is nothing abnormal
about it. You cannot force your Central Bank Governor to go on leave, it could
damage the economy”, the source said.
But this did not apply
to Sanusi’s predecessor, Professor Charles Soludo, who left office on May 29th,
when his tenure expired. A CBN source however said this was because Soludo was
hoping he would be appointed for a second term.
According to the
source who pleaded anonymity, the issue of the governor going on retirement
leave is a normal thing for us.
It would be recalled
that Sanusi had in a chat with Bloomberg on March 24th indicated his
intention not to seek second term as CBN Governor.
Sanusi said that he
had intimated President Goodluck Jonathan way back in 2011 that he would not be
interested in seeking second term in office on the expiration of the present
tenure in June 2014.
“I informed the
President way back in 2011 that I would not be interested in serving for
two terms,” Sanusi told Bloomberg adding that “the job has been done, largely”.
In November, he called
for earlier announcement of his successor, saying the Federal Government should
take a cue from the United States and announce the next CBN Governor three
months to the expiration of his tenure.
He said, “I think the
issue of Bernanke and Yellen, if you remember, it started about two months ago
and Bernanke ends in December. Tomorrow it will be six months to the end of my
term, probably a bit early for the government to start talking about the next
person. But I do hope that about two or three months before then, there should
be some announcement.
“Central bank
governors don’t comment on who they think their successor should be. It is not
our business to do that, it is the President’s decision.
But if I have input at all, I will try to
encourage that we announce a successor two to three months before the end of my
tenure so that everybody knows who that person is, what the views are and so
people prepare accordingly. By the way, some of the names are out there
in the newspapers and more can come out later.”
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