Usurping legislative powers
By kingsley Omose
The
outcry that would greet efforts by a serving Minister of Petroleum to issue
guidelines that contain radical changes to the laws in the Upstream sector as
contemplated in Petroleum Industry Bill, is difficult to imagine, but that is
exactly what is happening with the introduction of full-fledged Islamic banking
by Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi.
Although
this article is not about the radical changes contemplated to the Upstream
sector by the Petroleum Industry Bill, the parallel with full-fledged Islamic
banking is apt because changes contained in the Guidelines on Non-Interest
(Islamic) Banking are just as radical to the Nigerian Banking sector.
Without
having to beat around the bush, the intention of Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi,
the Central Bank of Nigeria
Governor is to launch an alternative to the existing banking system in Nigeria through
the use of guidelines, without the need for enabling legislation.
Mallam
Sanusi believe that the existing laws in the banking sector empower him to
establish an alternative banking system through issuing guidelines, and is
relying on provisions that allow for non-interest banking in our banking laws
as a basis for his unilateral actions.
The
issue here is not on the merits or demerits of Islamic banking, or whether
interest free banking is better than the interest based system that is at the
core of our banking system and the basis on which theCBN has been established
and licenses issued to deposit money banks.
The
issue is, what was the existing state of affairs regarding Islamic banking
prior to the January and June 2011 guidelines issued by the CBN, and what
changes have been made by these guidelines and whether these are changes that
can properly be addressed through guidelines.
I
am not miffed that Mallam Sanusi in his zeal to establish an alternative
banking system through guidelines initially equated non-interest banking as
being synonymous with Islamic banking, what is troubling is whether an
individual can arrogate to himself such awesome powers without the legislative
backing of the National Assembly.
Prior
to December 31, 2010 when the CBN issued the Guidelines on Sharia Governance
for Non Interest Financial Institutions in Nigeria that called for the
establishment of Sharia Advisory Committee for each of these institutions
conventional banks could deal in Sharia Compliant Financial products.
In
order words, licensed deposit money banks were allowed by the CBN to offer or
sell financial products or services that were Sharia compliant, and banks like
Bank PHB took advantage of this window to offer such services side by side with
it's normal banking services.
Having
acknowledged that non-interest banking was not the exclusive preserve of
Islamic banking; the CBN withdrew the December 2010 guidelines and in June 21,
2011 issued the Framework for the Regulation and Supervision of Institutions
Offering Non-Interest Financial Services in Nigeria.
The
June 2011 guidelines now categorized non-interest banking into two,
Non-Interest Financial Products and Services based on Principles of Islamic
Commercial Jurisprudence and Non-Interest Financial Products and Services based
on Any Other Established Rules and Principles.
The
most significant of the changes introduced by the June 2011 guidelines is the
elevation of non-interest banking using principles and rules of Islamic
commercial jurisprudence to an alternative banking system at par with the
financial products and services offered by conventional financial institutions.
To
enable this alternative system, the June 2011 guidelines now give the CBN the
power to license full-fledged Islamic banks, full-fledged Islamic merchant
banks, full-fledged Islamic Microfinance banks, Islamic development banks,
Islamic primary mortgage banks and Islamic finance corporations.
The
guidelines also replaced the Sharia Advisory Councils with Advisory Council of
Experts to work with the Institutions OfferingIslamic Financial Services while
the CBN will have it's own Advisory Council of Experts but is however silent on
the roles and modes of appointment of members.
Although
Mallam Sanusi claims to derive the powers to issue these guidelines from
enabling laws applicable to the banking system, it is wrong for an alternative
banking system to be foisted on Nigeria
through guidelines and not by enabling law promulgated by the National Assembly
and assented to by the President.
Aside
from that, the proposed full-fledged Islamic banking as put forward by the CBN
has serious implications for our Company Law, Legal and Judicial systems, Audit
and Tax systems, and the secular nature of the Nigerian constitution, that can
only be properly addressed in the National Assembly.
Mallam
Sanusi is being clever by half when he calls on those opposed to his actions to
seek redress in civil courts, seeing that he had earlier declared in a write up
that he believes the Sharia system as imposed by some states in Nigeria is
legal because they were never declared null and void by a court of law.
This
is the time for well meaning Nigerians not to play the Ostrich and pretend that
this issue will blow away, but to call on Mallam Sanusi to suspend his
guidelines and for a comprehensive Bill on Islamic Banking to be forwarded to
the National Assembly for consideration and promulgation.
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