Again, CBN Meets Bank CEOs Today, Considers All Options FG revenue drops to N1.159tn in Q2, investors await flurry of economic data this week Obinna Chima In bid to ensure financial system stability and integrity, while restoring calm, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)
will today meet with the Body of Bank CEOs, following which it will consider the plea by eight bank executives whose institutions were suspended from the foreign exchange (FX)
market last Tuesday, to give them more time to return the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC)/Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) Company dollar deposits held
by the affected banks to the Treasury Single Account (TSA) domiciled with the CBN. Nine banks were initially suspended from participating in the FX market by the CBN
last Tuesday for failing to return $2.334 billion belonging to the NNPC/NLNG to the TSA, despite the federal government’s directive since August last year that
all government deposits must be remitted to the account by September 15, 2015.
The eight banks – First Continued on page 9
INSIDE YOUR FREE COPY OF HOME AND DESIGN MAGAZINE Monday 29 August, 2016 Vol 21. No 7794. Price: N250
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Buhari: My Comments on Chiboks Girls Have Been Politicised
Says FG willing to consider prisoner swap for girls Nigeria to join Top 100 Countries in Ease of Doing Business by 2019 Iyobosa Uwugiaren and Tobi Soniyi in Abuja with agency report
L-R: Managing Director, Arco Integrity Engineering, Mr. Pius Jabhu; Group Managing Director/CEO, Arco Integrity, Mr. Alfred Okoigun; and Chairman, Arco Integrity, Mr. Joseph Akpieyi, speaking with State House correspondents after a meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja… recently godwin omoigui
President Muhammadu Buhari has reiterated the preparedness of the federal government to discuss the release of the Chibok girls kidnapped by the Boko Haram terror group since 2014, even as he expressed concern that his comments Continued on page 9
PIB: NNPC Concerned over Move by Petroleum Ministry to Assume Control of Proposed IJVs Ejiofor Alike The attempt by the Ministry of Petroleum Resources to assume control over the proposed Incorporated Joint Ventures (IJVs) and the Asset Management Company to be created by the new Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) may set the ministry on a collision course with the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), THISDAY investigations have revealed. The original PIB submitted to the National Assembly by the Umaru Musa Yar’Adua administration had provided for the corporatisation of the oil joint venture (JVs) assets held by NNPC and the international oil companies (IOCs) into IJVs.
But the IOCs had opposed the establishment of the IJVs following concerns that the NNPC, which controls majority stake in the existing joint venture oil assets, might insist on operating the incorporated entities. As a result, the IJVs were removed from the revised reform bill resubmitted by the administration of former
President Goodluck Jonathan in 2012 to the National Assembly. However, the current administration of President Muhammadu Buhari has unbundled the PIB into three legislations for easy passage and also reintroduced the IJVs in the revised bill to resolve the cash call challenged hampering the existing JVs, which have
accumulated to unpaid arrears of over $6 billion. It was also gathered that splitting the PIB was done to ensure that regulatory and fiscal issues are dealt with separately. The Ministry of Petroleum, it was learnt from a top NNPC source, is in the final stages of completing the comprehensive executive drafts of the split
PIB. It was also gathered that the first of the three pieces of legislation under the revised PIB being prepared by the executive arm of government is called the “Governance PIB”, while the version drafted by the Senate is called the “Petroleum Industry Continued on page 9