Nigerians losing money over dilapidated old notes, says Rep member

The lawmaker said the apex bank should not hide behind “deadline ad infinitum to shrink its responsibilities to the banking public”.


Afam Ogene, Anambra’s Ogbaru federal constituency representative, says Nigerians lose money due to worn-out naira notes.

Ogene sponsored a motion adopted by the house of representatives on Thursday, stating old naira notes expire December 31, 2024.

This contrasts the supreme court’s ruling allowing old and new naira notes to coexist “till further notice.”

In 2022, Godwin Emefiele’s Central Bank of Nigeria redesigned N200, N500, and N1,000 notes, causing scarcity and hardship before the 2023 elections.

The move made the naira scarce and led to unprecedented hardship in the build-up to the 2023 general election.

In a statement on Friday, the lawmaker said the apex bank should decide if the old notes should be phased out or not.

“Even with the latest development, some issues remain germaine: which country in the world runs its economy with two different sets of unidentical currency notes,” Ogene, leader of the Labour Party (LP) caucus, said.

“What was the intention of the CBN in introducing new sets of notes; was it not with an aim at eventually replacing the old sets?

“Now that the ‘politics’ that heralded the introduction of the new notes are long over, shall the country and its people continue to suffer the afflictions arising therefrom?

“For instance, it is common knowledge that some people still mistake the new N200 note for the old N10 bill. Yet, both continue to co-exist.

“Besides the issue of deadlines, who in Nigeria is not embarrassed by the stinking, dilapidated nature of currencies emanating from the vaults of our country’s commercial banks, while the CBN continues to look on, as if it is the new normal.

“Daily, citizens lose as much as between N5,000 to N10,000 for every N100,000 cashed in various banking halls, due to mutilated and torn notes.”

The lawmaker said the apex bank should not hide behind “deadline ad infinitum to shrink its responsibilities to the banking public”.

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