CBN recovers N6b from Banks for cheated Customers
Central
Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi has said about N6billion
lost to banks by customers has been recovered by the apex bank.
Sanusi spoke
in Abuja at the yearly Isaac Moghalu Foundation (IMOF) Lecture and Symposium,
entitled: Women in leadership, the education pipeline.
He said the
feat was recorded by the CBN’s Director of Consumer Protection, Hajia Umma
Aminu Dutse, whom he described as “ruthless and hard working”.
His words:
“The director of Consumer Protection has recovered over N6 billion in the last
one year for customers that were cheated by banks. She takes sides with banks’
customers. Even when I plead with her to be gentle with the banks, she is very
ruthless.”
Sanusi took a
swipe at women at the top of their careers and those with political clout,
accusing them of not doing enough for the womenfolk.
He said: “Not
many women help other women and this is really a big problem. So, we need to be
careful about just thinking that if you have a group of people in top
management level, things will be different.
“Ask the
women in power what they do for other women who are voiceless, you may be the
Minister of Finance or of Housing, many women cannot understand what we are
saying here.”
The CBN
helmsman lamented the low literacy level of girls in the North, saying in
Jigawa State, for example, girls’ completion rate in school is as low as 7.6
per cent.
He explained
that out of 100 girls, less than eight complete secondary school, adding that
70.8 per cent of girls in the Northwest between 20 and 29 years, cannot read
when compared to nine per cent in the West.
Sanusi
wondered how the country can be built when 93 per cent of the girls in the most
populous region do not complete secondary school education.
He criticized female ministers who spend time in government without any tangible proof of
their stewardship for the womenfolk. “If you spend four years in the cabinet
and you cannot say after four years what you did for women during the period,
shame on you!” he declared.
Sanusi said
his desire is to see more women in positions of authority. “We want many
skirts out there, and we want these skirts not to be limited to the top of the
board, because for every one woman that makes it up there to the board, there
are probably up to 5,000,000 or 10,000,000 women in the villages who don’t have
access to education,” he said.
The CBN
governor was also unhappy with the practice of credit processing in the country
which he condemned as being “gender biased.”
According to
Sanusi, “if you have a credit process that says you need tangible collateral or
landed property in a society where women do not generally hold titles to land,
you have already cut them off because men own the land and houses and for
you (women) to even approach a bank for a loan is almost impossible.”
As a result,
the CBN, he said, has resorted to forcing “the banks to look at those credit
policies and get them to answer, how do you get credit to that group.”
“It is also
wrong to promote men simply because they put in more hours at work whereas
women have to go home by 5pm to attend to their families and as result get
bypassed for promotion often. They are able to put in these hours simply
because they are men.”
To promote
gender balance in the banking sector, Sanusi disclosed it has been “agreed that
by 2014, at least 30 per cent of the board seats in banks will be held by women
and at least 40 per cent of senior management positions will be held by women.”
He further
stated that “this year we require that all banks’ when they publish their
statement of accounts, must publish its gender positions to name and shame,
even the Central Bank will not be exempted from this. There is a lot of public
pressure on these institutions that fall behind to make them to catch up.”
In the 50
years of the CBN’s existence “only four women had made it to director level and
this was a period when we had 10,000 staff, today we have seven or eight female
directors, this comes from a conscious policy of looking for qualified women to
take these positions.”
The
foundation’s executive director, Mrs Maryanne Moghalu said the lecture will
“examine how far we have come in developing women leaders across Nigeria, why
it is important to have women leadership as part of a broad agenda as part of
our social and economic agenda, how we can ensure this goal in a sustainable
manner by ensuring that women are trained and ready for leadership roles in the
public, private and non profit sectors and that they are sent to such roles in
their own merits and not just the values of voters.
Culled from the nationonline.ng
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