CBN urges bank customers to reject dirty naira notes

CBN urges bank customers to reject dirty naira notes

- CBN acting director of communications, Isaac Okorafor, accuses commercial banks of sabotaging effort in replacing mutilated notes with new ones

- He says the apex bank is aware of the high level of mutilated notes in the country

- Naira maintains strength against Dollar at parallel market

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on Thursday, May 10, said customers should demand new naira notes from their respective banks and reject dirty ones.

Isaac Okorafor, acting director, communications department of the of the apex bank, made the statement in Lagos in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

The CBN spokesperson said that the apex bank was aware of the high level of mutilated notes in the country and had taken several measures to addressing the rising incidence of mutilated notes.

He blamed commercial banks for sabotaging efforts in replacing mutilated notes with new ones in the country.

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According to him, one of the steps taken by the CBN in mopping up the mutilated notes from the system was reduction in the amount it charges banks for sorting the dirty notes for clean ones from N12,000 to N1,000 per box.

Okorafor said that the reduction in charges for the commercial banks which lasted for three months from January 2 to March 28 was to encourage them to bring back more dirty notes to CBN.

He said the sorting charges which used to be N12,000 was later raised to N2,000 per box after the March 28 deadline when the window was closed.

The director said the opportunity was limited to lower denomination naira notes comprising N50, N20 and N10 notes.

He hinted that the bank had adopted another option of withdrawing the unfit notes from circulations rather than depending mainly on the commercial banks on the task.

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Okorafor said that the bank had started engaging associations in various markets to encourage traders to change genuine dirty notes for new ones.

This, he added, would not attract any cost to traders.

“The bank has already taken the new measure to Kano, Kaduna and Abuja and also intends to bring it to the south,” he said.

On hoarding and selling of new currency notes, Okorafor said the serial numbers of the ones given out to the public would be used to trace whoever perpetuated the act.

He however, appealed to Nigerians to handle the national currency with care as it was a symbol of identity and value and should be handled with respect.

Meanwhile, the Nigerian Naira on Thursday, May 10, retained its strengthened rate at the parallel market against Dollar.

According to Legit.ng findings, the local currency maintained the same rates of N363 against Dollar, N500 to £1 and N430 against Euro as it was yesterday, January 30.

Recall that the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on Tuesday, May 8, boosted the inter-bank foreign exchange market with another 210 million dollars.

Can 1 Naira ever become 1 US dollar again on the Forex market? on Legit.ng TV

Source: Legit.ng

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