Malam Sanusi was a successful banker and
was a former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria. He was appointed
on 3 June 2009 for a five-year term, but was suspended from office by
President Goodluck Jonathan on 20 February 2014 after he was accused of
exposing some financial recklessness by the president’s regime. Malam
Sanusi is the grandson Muhammadu Sanusi (the 11th Fulani emir of Kano ).
He was a career banker and ranking Hausa nobleman, and also serves as a
respected Islamic scholar.
The global financial intelliegence
magazine, The Banker, published by the Financial Times, has conferred on
Sanusi two awards, the global award for Central Bank Governor of the
Year, as well as for Central Bank Governor of the Year for Africa. The
TIME magazine also listed Sanusi in its TIMES 100 list of most
influential people of 2011.
Banking career
In 1985 Sanusi joined Icon Limited
(Merchant Bankers), a subsidiary of Morgan Guaranty Trust Bank of New
York, and Baring Brothers of London. He moved to the United Bank for
Africa in 1997 in the Credit and Risk Management Division, rising to the
position of a General Manager.
In September 2005, he joined the Board
of First Bank of Nigeria as an Executive Director in charge of Risk and
Management Control, and was appointed Group Managing Director (CEO) in
January 2009. He was also the Chairman, Kakawa Discount House and sat on
the Board of FBN Bank (UK) Limited.
Sanusi is recognized in the banking
industry for his contribution towards developing a risk management
culture in Nigerian banking. First Bank is Nigeria’s oldest bank and one
of the biggest financial institutions in Africa. Sanusi was the first
northerner to be appointed CEO in First Bank’s history of more than a
century
Governor of the Central Bank
President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua nominated Sanusi as Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria on 1 June 2009 and his appointment was confirmed by the Senate on 3 June 2009, in the middle of a global financial crisis.
Analysts believed that Sanusi’s tempered
mien would serve as a counterpoise to the more aloof disposition of his
predecessor, Charles Chukwuma Soludo. Based on his past record, it
seemed probable that as governor of the central bank he would impose
stricter controls.
In August 2009, Sanusi led the Central
Bank to “rescue” Afribank, Intercontinental Bank, Union Bank, Oceanic
Bank and Finbank by bailing them out with 400 billion naira of public
money, and dismissed their chief executives. Some point to other factors
including religious, ethnic and existing bank records and plans to say
he in fact had a hidden agenda.
He said “We had to move in to send a
strong signal that such recklessness on the part of bank executives will
no longer be tolerated.” 16 senior bank officials faced charges that
included fraud, lending to fake companies, giving loans to companies
they had a personal interest in and conspiring with stockbrokers to
boost share prices, and today he has been appointed as the Emir of Kano
by Gov. Rabi’u Musa Kwankwaso of Kano following the departure of Alh.
Ado Bayero. In September 2009, he said that 15 of the current 24
Nigerian banks might survive reform in the banking sector.
In a wide-ranging interview with the
Financial Times in December 2009, Sanusi defended the extensive reforms
that he had initiated since taking office, dubbed by some as the “Sanusi
tsunami”. Some believe that he had a personal vendetta against some of
the bank CEOs while others point to proof of mismanagement of funds by
some of the CEOs, most notably Cecilia Ibru as justification for the
steps he implemented.
He noted that there was no choice but to
attack the many powerful and interrelated vested interests who were
exploiting the financial system, and expressed his appreciation of
support from the Presidency, the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission, the finance minister and others.
In January 2010, Sanusi said that banks
will only want to give credit to Nigeria’s small and medium enterprises
(SMEs), if the government gives adequate attention to the provision of
infrastructure.
At a February 2010 conference on banking
in Nigeria, Sanusi described his blueprint for reforming the Nigerian
financial system. He said that it was built around four pillars of
enhancing the quality of banks, establishing financial stability,
enabling healthy financial sector evolution and ensuring that the
financial sector contributes to the real economy. Talking later that
month, Sanusi said that the crash in the capital market was due to high
level of financial illiteracy on the part of Nigerian investors.
The Banker unanimously recognized him as
the Central Bank Governor of the Year 2010 citing his radical
anti-corruption campaign aimed at saving 24 banks on the brink of
collapse and pressing for the managers involved in the most blatant
cases of corruption to be charged and, in the case of two senior
bankers, imprisoned.
Sanusi has spoken at many distinguished
events, including Warwick Economics Summit in February 2012 where he
spoke about banking reforms in Nigeria and their impact on the economy.
SHARIA AUTHORITY
In parallel to his banking career,
Sanusi contributed to the debate over Sharia law. In 1997, Sanusi
obtained a degree in Sharia and Islamic Studies from the African
International University in Khartoum, Sudan.
Writing in the Weekly Trust in September
2000, he noted the problem of reconciling “belief in the universal and
eternal applicability of the Shariah with the need for a wholesale
adoption of its historically specific interpretation to meet the
requirements of a particular milieu.”
He further said that “Even a cursory
student of Islamic history knows that all the trappings of gender
inequality present in the Muslim society have socio-economic and
cultural, as opposed to religious roots.”
At a conference in 2000 in Kaduna,
Sanusi delivered a lecture on Islamic economics called Institutional
Framework of Zakat: Dimension and Implications. He argued that although
collection of zakat is the responsibility of the state, it may be the
responsibility of the Nigerian government rather than the emirs in
Northern Nigeria.
In July 2001 at a seminar in Abuja he
talked on Basic Needs and Redistributive Justice in Islam – The Panacea
to Poverty in Nigeria. He took the mainstream position that zakat is an
instrument for redistributing income, but argued in favor of giving the
role of redistribution to the government.
In October 2002 he published a paper on
The Hudhood Punishments in Northern Nigeria: A Muslim Criticism. In July
2003 he presented The Shari’a Debate and the Construction of a ‘Muslim’
Identity in Northern Nigeria: A Critical Perspective at a seminar at
the University of Bayreuth. In August 2003 he presented Democracy,
Rights and Islam: Theory, Epistemology and the Quest for Synthesis at an
international conference on Shari’ah Penal and Family Law in Nigeria
and in the Muslim World: A Rights-Based Approach in Abuja.
There are two underlying themes to
Sanusi’s position. First, Islam is concerned with delivering justice and
should not be a tool for self-seeking political agendas. Second, the
Wahhabist rhetoric of fundamentalists is counter to genuine Muslim
interests. He explains that Sharia is not divine but merely religious,
and is neither uniform nor unchanging.
NIGERIA’S FUEL SUBSIDY REMOVAL
Economists have tended to favor the
removal of subsidies. He cites the high level of corruption engendered
by the practice, the inefficiency of subsidizing consumption instead of
production leading to slower economic growth, and the fact that the
government borrows money to finance the subsidy, in effect taxing future
generations so that current Nigerians can consume more fuel.
Sanusi, other economists and development
practitioners[25] also cite that the subsidy is heavily biased in favor
of the small middle- and upper-class who use most of the fuel.
Additionally, some people purchase the subsidized gas in Nigeria to
resell it in other West African countries.
Emir of Kano
Being a royal descent, Sanusi was
selected to succeed his great uncle Ado Bayero as the Emir of Kano on
the 8th of June, 2014 and his formal coronation took place on the 9th of
June, 2014 making him the 57th Emir of Kano.
He has 3 wives and he just presently married an 18 year-old girl called Sa’adatu Barkindo -Musdafa, the daughter of the Lamido of Adamawa state. The marriage has since caused controversies in the country as Nigerians feel she is too young to get married.
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