Culled from PremiumTimes News
There is a scandal currently brewing in the financial sector. Our very own cerebral CBN governor is at the center of it. Please read the shocking report published by premium times below.
Twenty minutes to midnight on February 25, 2013, and a day before the
board of the Central Bank of Nigeria was due to meet, Governor Sanusi
Lamido Sanusi developed a craving for romance - he badly needed a kiss.
The governor, married with children, grabbed his mobile phone and
typed out a message. “Maybe you should come kiss me before board
meeting tomorrow,” Mr Sanusi wrote and then squeezed the send button.
At about 9 a.m. the next day, Mrs. Maryam Yaro, a married mother of
two, an assistant director and subordinate to the governor at the CBN,
arrived at Sanusi’s unnamed Abuja hotel, seeking to keep the date and
help address her boss’ craving for a kiss. (Insiders say board members,
including those who live in Abuja, are usually lodged in hotels ahead of
board meetings).
But
by the time Mrs. Yaro left the hotel to return to her official desk at
the CBN, the duo had also struck out an arrangement to spend the rest of
the week together in Lagos.
So, in the evening of Wednesday February 27, Mrs. Yaro flew to Lagos ahead of Mr. Sanusi and checked into a hotel in the city, skipping work, at taxpayer’s expenses, on Thursday February 28 and Friday, March 1.
To
keep faith with Mrs. Yaro’s date, the CBN governor arrived Lagos,
travelling on a chartered flight, on the night of February 28, and
checked into the Federal Palace Hotel, passage and boarding all at
taxpayers expenses.
Both Mr. Sanusi and Mrs. Yaro rendezvoused in the hotel till Sunday when both of them returned to Abuja, PREMIUM TIMES learnt.
“…I
had such a wonderful weekend,” Mrs. Yaro confessed to the governor
while aboard her Abuja-bound flight. “You have revived in me what I
thought I lost long ago. I thought I lost the passion to love again,”
she claimed.
“Alhamdulillahi. Love you,” Mr. Sanusi responded in a measured tone.
Insiders
say repeated violation of the statutory code of conduct for public
office holders such as hiring his girlfriends and mistresses without
complying with public service rules, dating married and unmarried women
within the bank, and flirting with them during official work hours have
become defining characters of Mr. Sanusi’s governorship of the central
bank.
An official of the bank spoke of how Mr. Sanusi had
enthroned nepotism at the bank, arbitrarily hiring girlfriends and
relatives and engaging in extramarital relationships with staff.
“This
man (the CBN governor) is the most morally bankrupt governor the CBN
has ever had,” the official, who did not want to be named for fear of
retribution, told PREMIUM TIMES. “Forget all the pretenses, he is a
shameless man of loose character.”
Investigations by this newspaper revealed that Mr. Lamido hired his latest mistress, Mrs. Yaro, without complying with the CBN recruitment policy that stressed, “all appointments shall be made on the basis of merit, through a fair and open selection process.”
“The
principles underlying the recruitment process are those of fairness,
credibility, equal employment opportunities, merit and optimization of
career prospects for currently employed staff,” the bank said on its
website.
But Mrs. Yaro, insiders say, was hired in July 2012
without adherence to these principles. Those who should know say Mrs.
Yaro, who was a staff at the National Programme on Food Security, an
agency under the Federal Ministry of Agriculture, was brought into the
bank as assistant director without “advert for the vacancy and after a
kangaroo interview.”
When contacted, Mr. Sanusi said due process was followed in hiring Mrs. Yaro.
He
said having worked for years in the ministry of agric, Mrs Yaro came
highly recommended and qualified for the job for which she was hired.
The
CBN governor continued, “I have known Dr Yaro since 1981. She was my
student in Yola and she later came to ABU Zaria. We have been very good
friends but this is not why NIRSAL took her. You may wish to check her
CV against all the other CVs in NIRSAL. And she did go through an
interview process with the NIRSAL CEO making the decision not CBN HR.
“As
for the personal allegations, this is all strange to me but I have a
personal policy of not responding to such allegations since in Nigeria
anything can be published on any public officer without proof. I have
limited myself to what concerns official allegations and leave you to
your God and your conscience on whatever else you want to publish. Thank
you for telling me though.”
Mrs Yaro however declined comments when contacted by PREMIUM TIMES.
“Be
careful what you are saying,” she told one of our reporters on the
telephone. “I have nothing to comment to you on anything.”
When
asked if she would be willing to respond to specific questions about her
trips to Lagos to keep dates with Mr. Sanusi, she simply said,
“Whatever it is, I don’t know. Will you just let me be?”
But our
investigations revealed that the governor’s claim was far from accurate.
Through several interviews and review of records, PREMIUM TIMES was
able to determine that Mrs. Yaro and Mr. Sanusi had dated each other for
at least six months before she was hired.
Insiders say Mr.
Sanusi repeatedly pestered the human resource department of the bank
ordering it to bring Mrs. Yaro’s application to him for approval. And
once the file reached his table, the governor wasted no time in treating
it.
On June 25, 2012, Mr. Sanusi, who was travelling in South
Africa at the time, telephoned Mrs. Yaro to break the news to her that
he had approved her recruitment in what critics consider a clear
conflict of interest and a violation of a provision of Nigeria’s Code of
Conduct which stipulates that “a public officer shall not put himself
in a position where his interest conflicts with his duties and
responsibilities.”
Mrs Yaro, (whose businessman husband, Ahmed,
is largely based in Kaduna but visits Abuja regularly) assumed duties at
the CBN in the first week of September 2012 and was deployed to the
Development Finance Department.
The department then put her in
charge of the bank’s Nigerian Incentive-Based Risk Sharing System For
Agricultural Lending, (NIRSAL), a unit that attempts to fix the
agricultural value chain, so that banks can lend with confidence to the
sector and, encourages banks to lend to the agricultural value chain by
offering them strong incentives and technical assistance.
Sources
said Mrs Yaro married Ahmed (or Shuaib, according to another source)
six years ago after her first husband, Waisu Yaro Bodinga (then an
executive director at the Nigeria Ports Authority) died in the ill-fated
ADC plane crash of 2006.
The romance between Mrs Yaro and Mr.
Sanusi became even hotter after she began work at the bank, with the two
lovers regularly exchanging telephone calls and text messages during
work hours to profess love for each other.
At times, Mrs Yaro
would remain in her office far beyond close of work to enable her to
keep appointments with the CBN governor, records show.
Sometimes, Mrs
Yaro would raise concerns about Mr. Sanusi’s other girlfriends and
mistresses (such as Sutura and Rose) and how they were blocking her from
getting the governor’s full attention, but the relationship continued
nonetheless.
Mrs. Yaro also began to have access to confidential
information known only to top management and board of the bank, insiders
say.
At a point, one source said, she began to strategise to
corner contracts for one Goke Akinboro, the Chief Executive Officer of
Lagos-based Cellullant Limited, an information technology company. Mr.
Akinboro is also described as “very close” to Mrs Yaro.
On March
15, 2013, the CBN lovers headed to Lagos again for another weekend of
fun. The initial plan was for the duo to fly to the nation’s commercial
capital on Saturday, March 16, returning to Abuja on Sunday. But the
trip had to be brought forward by a day after the lovers realized that
the Area Council election in Abuja was holding that Saturday and that
movement might be restricted.
Mrs. Yaro arrived Lagos on the night of
March 15, and immediately checked into the Radisson Blu Anchorage Hotel
on Victoria Island. Mr. Sanusi flew from Kano to Lagos via chartered
jet on the bills of the Nigerian taxpayers. He arrived at about 11 p.m.,
stopped by his Ikoyi home, before dashing to the hotel where Mrs. Yaro
was waiting in a seductive dress in Room 23. The lovers spent that night
and the next day together in the hotel.
As he flew into
Abuja March 17 on a chartered jet, Mr. Sanusi sent a message to Mrs Yaro
saying, “Love. Just landed in Abuja. Thank you for a wonderful
weekend.” Mrs Yaro replied, “Alhamdulillah. I had a wonderful weekend
too. I am able to get the 3:15 flight on Arik Air. Love you.”
But
in-between these rendezvous in Lagos, Mr. Sanusi and Mrs Yaro also
found time to get together elsewhere. They were to meet on March 11,
2013, in Makurdi but somehow Mrs Yaro could not make it to the Benue
State capital. But earlier on February 14, (Valentine’s Day), the
lovers had a good time together in Maiduguri. Although, the two of them
travelled to the city on different missions, they somehow found a way to
get together.
At a point, Mrs Yaro voiced open frustration when
Mr. Lamido delayed in taking her calls as she tried, frantically, to
track him down. “I’m thinking that one Shuwa girl has snatched you away
from me,” Mrs. Yaro wrote in a message. “I don’t trust them (Maiduguri
girls) with you.”
A velvet-ranking figure within Nigeria’s
economic and political circles, Mr. Sanusi, is generally perceived as
one of the intellectual anchors and moral conscience of this
administration. When his five-year term expires next year, he has
indicated he would not renew his contract. Mr. Sanusi has a
well-advertised ambition to become the future emir of his native Kano,
where he is already a top chieftaincy holder (Dan Maje Kano). Dan Majen
Kano, a historic title, which means Son of Emir-Maje, is reserved for
the royal family members from the Kano Habe dynasty.
A zigzag prospect to run for the Nigerian presidency is also believed to be floating in the horizon for Mr. Sanusi.
Multiple
sources at both the CBN and First Bank, where Mr. Sanusi was managing
director before his appointment to the central bank, describe the
governor as an “incurable womanizer.”
“This guy seems unable to
resist anything in skirt, and it is unfortunate that a lot of young
people look up to him as an example,” one of Mr. Sanusi’s aides in Abuja
said, expressing widely held concerns in banking circles that “It is
sad that he wouldn’t even let married women be.”
Mr. Sanusi, 51,
appointed CBN Governor on June 3 2009, is a smart economist and
award-winning banker with a background in risk management.
He
holds a graduate degree in economics from the Ahmadu Bello University,
Zaria and a diploma in Sharia and Islamic Studies from the African
International University in Khartoum, Sudan. Today, Mr. Sanusi is also
commonly regarded as an important voice in Islamic jurisprudence.
The
Banker, the UK-based financial magazine honoured him in 2010 as global
Central Bank Governor of the Year as well as African Central Bank
Governor of the Year. In 2011, the TIME magazine listed Mr. Sanusi in
its annual publication of 100 most influential people.
At the
African Banker Awards gala dinner held Wednesday in Morocco, Mr. Sanusi
also emerged the “2013 Africa Central Bank Governor of the Year.”
“There
is no doubt that he is a fairly effective banker,” an official of one
of Nigeria’s leading banks, who requested anonymity for fear his bank
might be targeted, told PREMIUM TIMES. “But he is a man of zero morality
despite his public posturing. It is really sad.”
These so called people in positions are very horrible role models 4 d coming generation.May God help us
ReplyDeleteAm so disappointed in this dude. I wonder how many other mistresses he got out there. To imagine he is using state funds for is indiscretions is heartbreaking.
ReplyDelete