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Thursday, 1 March 2007, 10:25 GMT
In pictures: Nigeria's new money

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Lower-denomination naira notes and coins in Nigeria have had a makeover, making them smaller, lighter and more durable. Some in the capital said the notes "look like hard currency".

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Many were eager to be the first spenders on Wednesday and abandoned their jobs and headed for the Central Bank in Abuja where they scrambled to exchange old for new.

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The bank says the new 50, 20, 10 and 5 denominations have the added bonus of being "extremely difficult to forge". Higher 1,000, 500, 200 and 100 notes remain unchanged.

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The redesign is aimed at making business transactions easier as people have complained about having to carry heavy wads of notes and coins. $1 is equivalent to about 130 naira.

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But some were still unimpressed. "The weak naira means that you will still have to carry loads and loads to buy anything," says Maureen Nweke displaying the new 2 and 1 naira coins.

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But their introduction has caused controversy among Muslims because the Arabic inscriptions written in Hausa have been removed.

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The new notes have their values written in Nigeria's three major languages, Hausa, Yoruba and Igbo. The old notes will be phased out after a certain period.
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