Nigerians student overseas protest against ATM card ban
Is the government doing three much because most student abroad don’t find funny
Nigerians overseas, mostly
undergraduate students, on Saturday took to the streets to protest against
Deposit Money Banks’ proposed ban on naira-denominated Automated Teller Machine
cards for dollar-denominated transactions when users are outside the country.
The ban is to take effect from
January 1, 2016.
The banks will not allow their
customers to use naira-denominated ATM cards locally for transactions
denominated in forex.
This means that bank customers will
not be able to use their cards to buy products from foreign e-commerce sites
like e-bay and amazon.com in which payments are made in forex.
Different photographs of
placard-carrying protesters had gone viral on the Internet on Saturday, in
which the youths stated that they needed the payment cards to survive.
Various websites and blogs that
published the photos however did not give the details of the protesters’
location.
In one of the photographs, a lady
who held a Nigerian flag had displayed a placard that read, “My father is a
successful palm wine tapper. He is not a corrupt thief. We need our naira ATM
(card).”
In another photograph, a male youth
had also said in his placard, “CBN Governor, why? Can you not advise Buhari? We
need our naira ATM cards to survive.”
Another held a placard in another
photograph which also read, “My father is not a politician or government thief.
He is only a businessman. I need my naira ATM (card).”
The Nigerians in the Diaspora also
protested against the slashing of transaction allowance of their
dollar-denominated debit and credit cards.
In a group photo, a lady said,
“Nigerian students abroad need their naira MasterCard (ATM) to survive,” while
a man who wrapped himself with Nigerian flag wrote on his placard, “$1000/month
on ATM/POS/online does not cover hospital bills.”
According to findings by our
correspondent, Ecobank Nigeria Plc has reduced its limit from $50,000 to
$5,000, with a maximum of $500 monthly and $100 daily expenditure.
Skye Bank Plc, in a notice to its
customers via email, also slashed its international card spending limit from
$50,000 to $12,000 annually, a maximum of $1,000 monthly and $100 daily.
Nigerians student overseas protest against ATM card ban
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