Rogue bankers steal customers’ funds online .

Cases of internal online fraud committed by bank employees have been on the rise lately,
The PUNCH has learnt.
Our correspondent
gathered that porous data system, coupled with dwindling remuneration in
some of the banks, might have been encouraging bankers to tamper with
customers’ funds.
Analysts are of the
view that the quest to live fantasy lifestyles might have led some of
the bankers to engage in such an illicit act.
An employee of a new
generation bank said many of his former colleagues were sacked within
the last two years due to discreet online manipulation of customers’
funds.
“Some had to resign when the lid on their deals was blown off,” the source, who pleaded not to be named, said.
“The most common cases
are those that have to do with bankers tampering with the accounts of
deceased customers and transferring the funds into their personal
accounts within the same bank, or some other banks,”
the source added.
The Central Bank of
Nigeria had last month said there was a need to collaborate with various
industry stakeholders to ensure that banks and other players in the
financial services sector had maximum information
security.
The CBN, through its
Chief Information Security Officer, Taiwo Longe, had said that
information security involved the confidentiality, integrity and
availability of data, regardless of the form the data might
take; whether electronic or print.
He said, “Financial
institutions, hospitals, telecommunications corporations and private
businesses, amass a great deal of confidential information about their
customers, employees, products, research findings
and financial status, among others.
“As such, there is a
need for maximum security of this information that is collected,
processed and stored on computers and transmitted across computer
networks.
“When the
confidentiality, integrity and availability of data is impacted,
security is said to have been breached. There are various threats to
information security. Some are very dangerous and disruptive; others
are just a nuisance.”
Responding to the
issue of online banking fraud, the Bankers’ Committee, through the
Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Access Bank Plc, Mr. Herbert
Wigwe, said, “Online frauds in the banks are connected
to biometrics. All frauds will end up in some accounts; so, if you have
details of the person that post that account, that is the biometric
details, no two individuals can have the same details, it will be easy
to basically track or determine the culprit within
the overall system.
“Remember that the
industry is going to be sharing this platform. Therefore, once you know
where that person is across the entire industry, we will all know that
the person is a fraudster and he cannot change
his name. The day you register, that is your name forever. If you come
back with a thumbprint, and you try to change your name, the system will
determine what you are about to do.”
“The second level is
that the Bankers’ Committee is also looking at ways to determine what
the appropriate levels of online transfers can be. The whole idea is to
mitigate the issue of people transferring money
and huge fraud. By reducing the amount, for instance, the incidence and
the value of what that fraud can possibly be can be reduced.”
An industry analyst,
Eseoghene Idolor, told our correspondent that poor internal control and
checks by the banks usually created loopholes for their employees to
commit fraud.
“Therefore, to reduce
or eliminate fraud, there is a need to always have effective audit,
security and surveillance systems during and after bank official
operating hours,” he said.
The immediate past
Chairman, Committee of e-Banking Heads, Mr. Chuks Iku, however,
differed, saying, “It is very difficult to tamper with the accounts of
customers in a bank because of the internal processes.”
According to him,
closing an account or tampering with someone else’s money is not that
easy, adding, “I do not agree that customers’ funds can be tampered
with.
“If someone wants to commit fraud in the bank, it is difficult to stop, but such fraud will definitely be found out,” he added.
The Head, Brand and
Media, eTranzact, Mr. Adeyemi Opene, encouraged customers to embrace
mobile banking, “as there is minimal fraud in the process and it will
help to avoid the bankers’ undue access to customers’
funds.”
“We didn’t pioneer
online transactions, but we have really worked so hard to ensure that
mobile transactions are seamless and secure,” he added.
Opene argued that for
every transaction through mobile banking, there was a two-level
authentication that made it very difficult for fraud to be perpetuated.
“We pioneered the
Electronic Security Authentication; so, there is no way fraud can occur
through the mobile money process, except when one reveals one’s card
details,” he added.
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