'Cryptocurrency is not legitimate money,' says Nigeria's central bank governor

Published at: Feb. 24, 2021

Godwin Emefiele, governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, has defended the apex bank’s decision to ban banks from servicing cryptocurrency exchanges in the country.

Appearing before a joint Senate Committee on Banking, Insurance and Other Financial Institutions; ICT and Cybercrime; and Capital Market, Emefiele remarked that the CBN ban was in the best interest of Nigerians.

According to a report by media outlet Punch, while addressing the Senate committee, Emefiele remarked:

“Cryptocurrency is not legitimate money. Cryptocurrency has no place in our monetary system at this time and cryptocurrency transactions should not be carried out through the Nigerian banking system.”

The CBN governor also reiterated that despite the ban, the central bank was doing its due diligence to better understand the emerging digital asset space.

As previously reported by Cointelegraph, the Nigerian Senate had summoned the CBN governor along with other heads of federal regulatory agencies to a hearing on the way forward for crypto regulations.

Other participating regulatory chiefs in the hearing also echoed the CBN’s negative stance, with Bolaji Owasanoye, chairman of the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission, linking cryptocurrencies to the activities of terrorist and kidnappers.

Owasanoye echoed the well-worn, inaccurate rhetoric that crypto transactions are opaque in nature. However, the industry is dotted with robust forensic capabilities under the aegis of blockchain intelligence firms like CipherTrace and Chainalysis.

Indeed, these organizations have aided law enforcement agencies in many countries to apprehend criminal syndicates involved in crimes like drug trafficking and child pornography.

According to its 2020 crime report, Chainalysis revealed that only 0.34% of all crypto transactions for the entire year were involved in criminal activities. Meanwhile, a September 2020 report by the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs estimated that money laundering in mainstream finance amounted to 2.7% of the global gross domestic product.

Also appearing before the Senate committee was Lamido Yuguda, director-general of Nigeria’s Securities and Exchange Commission. According to Yuguda, the SEC has decided to pause its planned regulatory framework for digital assets following the CBN ban.

Earlier in February, the SEC had declared that the crypto market was too big to ignore. At the time, Timi Agama, an SEC executive, stated that the commission was working with other relevant agencies to create a legal framework for digital assets in Nigeria.

Senator Uba Sani of the Kaduna Central Senatorial District, who heads the committee, promised that the panel would work to accommodate all the guidance received from relevant stakeholders without any preconceived recommendations.

Since the CBN ban, the Bitcoin (BTC) price premium in Nigeria has steadily increased. As of the time of writing, this premium has risen to more than 67%.

Tags
Ban
Related Posts
Crypto will ‘come to life’ in Nigeria, central bank governor says
At a 279th meeting of the Monetary Policy Committee in Abuja, Central Bank of Nigeria Governor Godwin Emefiele expressed confidence that cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin (BTC) will be legal in the country, Business Insider reported on Wednesday. Emefiele did not directly mention a decision to reverse the CBN’s February ban of institutions from buying and selling crypto but noted that the bank has been investigating the industry: “We are committed in the CBN, and I can assure everybody that digital currency will come to life even in Nigeria [...] Under cryptocurrency and Bitcoin, Nigeria comes 2nd, while on the global side …
Bitcoin / May 28, 2021
Crypto market too big to ignore, says Nigeria SEC
Having recently suspended its planned crypto regulations in the wake of the central bank ban, Nigeria’s Securities and Exchange Commission has clarified its position on cryptocurrencies in the country. According to a report by Premium Times, both the SEC and the Central Bank of Nigeria will work collaboratively on devising a concrete regulatory framework for cryptocurrencies in Nigeria. For Timi Agama — the commission’s registration, exchanges, market infrastructure and innovation head — regulators in Nigeria cannot afford to ignore the $1.74 trillion crypto market. Speaking at a virtual conference organized by the Association of Capital Market Academics of Nigeria in …
Regulation / Feb. 22, 2021
More harm than good? Nigerian crypto users in disbelief over CBN ban
The Central Bank of Nigeria has banned banks from servicing crypto exchanges in the country in a move that echoes actions taken by its Indian counterpart back in 2018. Reactions to the news among the political class have been divided among ethnic and geopolitical lines, with the more progressive elements calling for a nuanced approach by the apex bank. In November 2020, Nigeria’s gross domestic product declined for a second successive quarter, plunging the nation’s economy into another recession — the second in the space of five years. According to the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics, 26 out of the 36 …
Regulation / Feb. 13, 2021
Nigeria's SEC suspends planned crypto regulations amid central bank ban
The Nigerian Securities and Exchange Commission has put its plans for regulating cryptocurrencies on hold following the recent ban by the central bank prohibiting financial institutions from servicing crypto exchanges. In an emailed statement quoted by the Daily Post on Friday, the SEC stated: “For the purpose of admittance into the SEC Regulatory Incubation Framework, the assessment of all persons (and products) affected by the CBN Circular of February 5, 2021, is hereby put on hold until such persons are able to operate bank accounts within the Nigerian banking system.” As previously reported by Cointelegraph, the commission recognized digital assets …
Regulation / Feb. 12, 2021
Hungary's central bank chief wants EU-wide crypto trading and mining ban
György Matolcsy, Governor of the Hungarian National Bank, has proposed a blanket ban on all cryptocurrency trading and mining operations across the European Union. Governor Matolcsy cited the recent crypto ban imposed by China in a blog post shared by the Hungarian central bank a.k.a. Magyar Nemzeti Bank (MNB) titled “Time has come to ban crypto trading and mining in the EU.” He also pointed out the Russian central bank’s proposal that calls for a blanket ban on domestic cryptocurrency trading and mining. Reciprocating the proposals for a crypto ban, Matolcsy said: “I perfectly agree with the proposal and also …
Adoption / Feb. 12, 2022