“I have been coming here to sell cow meat on a daily basis, but the turnout has not been encouraging, so I decided to stay at home for some days.”
That was what led to the late deployment of materials to the various polling units.
An Akure resident stated that it is worrisome that the CBN and other authorities are not talking to Nigerians.
Mr Tinubu said he would support CBN’s cashless policy but not the hurting Nigerians.
Kimchi Apollo, a spokesman for NMDPRA, stated this on Thursday in Abuja via a statement.
IPMAN had earlier directed its members to suspend payment for products from source until further notice.
The Edo governor said, “As a government, we do not have a problem with the policy,” and asked that the policy “be encouraged”.
“As I speak with you now, I do not have one naira in my pocket.”
“Parents with kids in public schools give money daily to their children for lunch, most commerce is informal, so you need cash for most things,” he said.
On Friday, thousands of customers thronged bank branches on the famous Bank Road in the Bauchi metropolis but were left disappointed.
