The Central Bank of Nigeria
(CBN) has said it will start monitoring banks to ensure that dispense
errors are automatically reversed and the account of the customer
credited, inundated by complaints from bank
customers over delays and most times non-reversal of dispense errors
encountered during electronic transactions,
The CBN, which said banks that continue
to err would be sanctioned, added that it plans to extend the Bank
Verification Number (BVN) registration to customers of other financial
institutions such as Microfinance Banks (MFBs) and Primary Mortgage
Institutions (PMIs), among others.
The CBN Director, Banking and Payment
Systems Department, ‘Dipo Fatokun, said this at the Finance
Correspondents Association of Nigeria (FICAN) Bi-monthly forum hosted by
the central bank in Lagos at the weekend. He spoke on the topic:
“Recent Developments in the Electronic Payment System and Implication
for Customers.”
According to him, the central bank had
received complaints from customers against some banks which dispense
errors are not reverted even after complaints had been lodged by the
customers to their respective banks.
Also, the CBN had last year directed that
banks programme their systems such that partial or non-dispense error by
automated teller machines are automatically rectified. However, not all
banks have complied with this directive.
He explained: “We discovered
that many of these dispense errors that were not returned to the
customers were sitting as idle balances for the banks. So what we have
done is that from last year, banks are supposed to electronically return
the money for either a non-dispense error or partial dispense error.
“We will soon start monitoring the banks
because almost all the banks have given us statistics of what they
claim they have returned to their customers. The system should be
automated such that whether a customer complains or not, when there is a
partial dispense or non-dispense, such customer’s account should be
refunded and if it is not refunded, then they stand liable.”
The central bank director also said
banks that offer services through USSD on their mobile phones should
ensure their customers are protected.
Throwing more light on the proposed BVN
enrollment for MFBs and other financial institutions, said
He said deposit money banks would serve as registration points but customers of
the MFBs and PMIs would have to verify their BVN at their respective
financial institutions.
He however did not specify if there would be a deadline such as the one given to customers of commercial banks.
He argued that the BVN project had helped reduce the number of bank frauds in the industry.
“I want to assure you that the BVN has
assisted us a lot in the banking system. It has assisted us to check
frauds, and we are working on a framework that will enable us not to
blacklist customers, because of some legal implications, but at least to
watch-list a customer that is identified to have been fraudulent, or
have done what he is not supposed to do across the banking sector,” he
said.
The CBN director said the number of BVN
linked to customers’ accounts as at August 23, this year was 36.7
million, while the total number of individual customers in the banks was
reported as 59.9 million as at the same date.
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