In
keeping with his vow, which analysts see as a direct confrontation with
President Goodluck Jonathan, Sanusi has said he will not proceed on his
terminal leave in March as initially being speculated.
Sanusi
expressed his determination to remain in office until the expiration of
his one-term tenure of five years on June 2 during a meeting with top
management officers of the bank on Wednesday.
The
Director, Corporate Communications Department, CBN, Mr. Ugochukwu
Okoroafor, confirmed the development in a chat with journalist in Abuja
on Thursday.
He said the governor
used the opportunity provided by the “family meeting” to clear doubts
surrounding the expiration of his tenure.
Okoroafor
said, “The CBN is an important organisation in the economy of this
country and we have to be careful in whatever we do because our actions
send a strong message to the economy as a whole.
According to Okoroafor, the
CBN governor will formally announce his retirement in March, when his
successor is expected to be named, and will remain in office until June
2.
Both chambers of the National Assembly declined comments on the alleged plan by the Federal Government to sack Sanusi.
The
spokesperson for the Senate, Eyinnaya Abaribe, and his counterpart in
the House of Representatives, Mr. Zakari Mohammed, said the National
Assembly would not be dragged into “a mere rumour.”
Abaribe, in a telephone interview said, “The
Senate will not make any comment on any issue that is not before it. It
remains a rumour until it is properly communicated to the Senate.”
Mohammed
also said, “I have no comment to make. The National Assembly as an
institution will not be dragged into any controversy based on a mere
allegation.”
Efforts to get the
Presidency’s reaction did not yield any positive result as the Special
Adviser on Media and Publicity to the President, Dr. Reuben Abati, did
not respond to calls made to his mobile telephone line, nor respond to
text messages sent to the same line.
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