 A few weeks before the presidential election, a clergyman, pastor, Addisheyeh, Saint-Fouillier, says the Central Bank of Nigeria's cashless policy may be a hindrance to election participation despite upsurge awareness. Saint-Fouillier made this known in an interview with our correspondent Habibat Ajayi, lamenting the hardship Nigerians go through before accessing their hard-earned money. He urged the CBN governor, Godwin Amirfalli, to fine-tune the policy for a hitch for election. Junior, a lot of people do not vote. That is the truth of the matter. Maybe it is only during this election that we will have the upsurge of election in view of the fact that the mobilization is quite heavy. So, but if the situation is such that people will not be able to feed because of government policy, people I think may not go for election where they are searching for food, where they are searching for water, where they are searching for electricity, when it is not possible for them to move from one place to the other, the view of the fact that the transportation now is very, very expensive and the naira, the exchange, the exchange, the problem of the swap of naira, the problem is there. So, we should just try as much as possible to fine-tune the policy. The policy remains that it is hotting the people, that the situation will not be so turbulent as to disallow the election. We want to appeal to the government, the central bank governor, to fine-tune the policy. This policy at this auspicious time. Hit the notification button so you get notified about fresh news updates.