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Page last updated at 16:44 GMT, Friday, 2 October 2009 17:44 UK

Nigeria bails out four more banks

Lamido Sanusi in Lagos, 14 August
Mr Sanusi, Nigeria's central bank chief, has taken a tough line with the banks

Nigeria's central bank has had to bail out four more banks and has sacked three of their chief executives.

The rescued banks - Equitorial Trust, Bank PHB, Spring Bank and Wema Bank - have been given 200bn naira ($1.37bn; £861m) in loans and support.

After an audit of their books, the central bank said they were "adjudged to be in a grave situation".

Central bank governor Lamido Sanusi has been cracking down on the biggest banks as he seeks to clean up the system.

Audits completed

Mr Sanusi, who only took office in June, has now completed an examination of all of Nigeria's 24 banks.

The regulator removed the heads of Equitorial Trust, Bank PHB and Spring Bank and appointed new management to run them.

It also said another bank, Unity, did not have sufficient capital but had enough to avoid being in a grave situation.

In August, Mr Sanusi injected a total of 400bn naira into five banks - Afribank, Intercontinental Bank, Finbank, Oceanic Bank and Union Bank - after they were found to have very low cash reserves and fired their senior management.

They had run up bad loans totalling a collective 1.14 trillion naira.

Four of the chief executives have now appeared in court charged with fraud.

The country's Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) says nearly $300m of bad debt has been recovered, but that billions are still outstanding.



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