An email sent by Standard Chartered Bank
Nigeria to its customers has revealed the Central Bank of Nigeria’s
plan to hault all foreign (non-Naira) transactions on Naira ATM, Debit
and Credit cards effective January 1 2016.
What
this means is that, if you travel abroad and try to use your card, it
will not work. If you shop online and the transaction is billed in any
foreign currency, it will not work. If you are in Nigeria and try to use
your card fo a foreign currency transaction, it will not work.
Sunday Punch reveals,
In a notice to its customers, Standard Chartered said, “This is to notify you that from January 1, 2016, your naira card will no longer be enabled for international use. This is as a result of the limited foreign exchange supply in the financial market.”Asked how long the suspension of cards from international transactions would be, the spokesperson for Standard Chartered Nigeria, Mrs. Dayo Adurogbo, said, “We cannot give a definite date. It depends on how soon it is available. We will do everything to meet our customers’ demand once it is available.”Further findings showed that a number of other banks had stopped customers from using their ATM cards abroad but had yet to officially communicate this to them.
This is bad news
for Nigerian travellers and business owners who rely on this service for
hotels, flight bookings and ordering goods.
However,
a source at CBN says it is “a necessity”. Punch outline this by
explaining the cause – the fall in prices of crude oil, the main earner
of foreign exchange for Nigeria, has made the nation’s forex income to
reduce drastically, creating dollar scarcity crisis for the Central Bank
of Nigeria.
The CBN has been
rationing dollar to banks, importers and other forex users as the
nation’s foreign exchange reserves continue to deplete, hitting $29.4bn
on December 7, 2015.
No comments:
Post a Comment