Bello threatens commercial banks over old naira notes

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Following the rejection of the old Naira notes, Gov. Yahaya Bello of the Kogi State has threatened to shut down commercial banks that refused to receive such notes in the state.

The governor whose threat was contained in a statement by the state’s Commissioner for Information, Mr Kingsley Fanwo, also threatened that legal action would be instituted against anyone who rejects the old notes.

“It is unacceptable that persons and businesses continue to reject the old currency after the Supreme Court ruling,” Bello warned.

He said that the essence of the state joining the suit challenging the Federal Government and the CBN was to ease the suffering of Kogi residents.

“The reason the Kogi State Government joined other state governments in the country to pursue the case was to ease the hardship occasioned by the unavailability of the new naira notes which the court fully granted.

“It is, therefore, unacceptable that some persons and businesses will continue to reject the use of the old naira notes, even after the court judgment validates their use.

“Rejecting the old naira notes is a clear disobedience of the Supreme Court ruling anyone who rejects the old naira notes should be reported to security and government authorities for immediate action.

“Also, banks that refuse to accept old naira deposits shall be sealed as the State Government will not accommodate financial institutions that willfully disobey court orders, more so, the orders of the highest court in Nigeria,” Bello said.

Shamefully, days after the Supreme Court judgment on the Naira redesign policy, the Central Bank of Nigeria have yet to comply with the apex court’s ruling that the old notes should remain as legal tender until December 31, 2023.

Recalls that on March 3, 2023, the court ordered that the old N200, N500 and N1000 notes should remain in circulation until December 31.

The apex court had described the policy as an affront to the 1999 constitution and that it had led to some people engaging in “trade by barter in this modern age, all in a bid to survive.”

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