Audio By Carbonatix
The Nigerian government says it has demanded almost $10bn (£8bn) in compensation from the cryptocurrency firm, Binance.
It says Binance manipulated foreign exchange rates through currency speculation and rate-fixing, which have seen the naira lose nearly 70% of its value in recent months.
Two Binance executives were arrested in Nigeria earlier in the week.
Binance has not responded to the BBC's requests for comment.
Nigeria is Africa's biggest economy and also one of the world's biggest cryptocurrency markets.
On Tuesday, Nigeria's central bank governor Olayemi Cardoso said Binance Nigeria had moved $26bn worth of untraceable funds.
"These allegations are weighty," Tilewa Adebajo CFG Advisory tells the BBC. "That's a huge sum - even more than the annual Nigeria diaspora remittances of $24bn".
"The government must have done their homework, hence the allegations."
Cryptocurrency transactions equivalent to about 12% of Nigeria's total income, or GDP, took place in the year to June 2023, according to Reuters news agency.
Cryptocurrencies are not illegal in Nigeria but firms must register in order to operate there, the government says. A special adviser to Nigeria's president told the BBC that Binance had failed to do this.
After he came into office last year, President Bola Tinubu scrapped the policy of pegging the naira to the dollar, allowing traders to buy and sell the currency at rates determined by the market. But special advisor Bayo Onanuga said the recent collapse was not the result of normal activity.
"All of a sudden the exchange rate went through the roof... and it was being caused by the people on Binance platform," he told the BBC Newsday programme.
"The government could not just fold its hands and allow this thing to continue."
Binance is understood to be one of the most popular cryptocurrency platforms in the country.
To the frustration of Nigerian users, Binance and several other cryptocurrency firms have been suspended in the country in recent weeks including Coinbase, Kraken, Forextime, OctaFX, Crypto and FXTM in an attempt to halt the slide of the naira.
As well as the collapse of the naira, the government also says cryptocurrency is used for money laundering and funding terror.
The "anonymity and privacy inherent in the cryptocurrency system are what draw individuals, particularly those with illicit intentions, towards its use," said a recent report by the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit.
Central bank governor Mr Cardoso said on Tuesday that "illicit flows" had been spotted on some cryptocurrency platforms in Nigeria. No specific firms were named as culprits.
In another measure intended to curb foreign-currency trading, Nigeria has closed thousands of bureaux de change.
Nigeria's central bank has been under pressure to stabilise the national currency, the naira, which currently exchanges at 1,595 naira to US$1, compared to about 460 a year ago.
The collapse of the naira has worsened the cost-of-living crisis. High food and commodity prices - including fuel and transport - have led to protests in recent weeks.
Latest Stories
-
It’s easier to move from GH₵100k to GH₵1m than from zero to GH₵100k- Ecobank Development Corporation MD
6 seconds -
Between faith and rights: A nuanced strategic view on the debate over an Islamic widow’s political ambition
12 minutes -
At worst, Baba Jamal should have been fined – Vitus Azeem
18 minutes -
Gender Minister visits the 31st December Women’s Day Care Centre and the Makola clinic
20 minutes -
Ayawaso East NDC primary: Why feed people for votes? Are they your children? – Kofi Kapito
25 minutes -
Ziavi Traditional Area begins funeral rites for Togbega Ayim Kwaku IV
33 minutes -
Photos: Mahama swears in Presidential Advisory Group on Economy
34 minutes -
Ghana intensifies boundary pillar construction with Côte d’Ivoire
34 minutes -
NHIA settles December–January claims worth GH¢400m for service providers
39 minutes -
Mahama warns economic advisers of ‘rough road ahead’ amid debt distress
39 minutes -
EC engages political parties in preparatory meeting for March 3 Ayawaso East by-election
42 minutes -
Forgiveness key to restoring broken relationships – Rev. Daniel Annan
43 minutes -
Joy Prime partners ALM for 2026 African Leadership Awards in Accra
50 minutes -
Retaining Baba Jamal shows NDC condones vote-buying – Vitus Azeem
53 minutes -
AG ordered to disclose Ghana-US deportation agreement to Democracy Hub
57 minutes
