The House of Representatives on Thursday directed the
Central Bank of Nigeria to immediately stop the “abuse” of the Automated Teller
Machine withdrawal charges by commercial banks.
The House blamed such “fraudulent practices” by commercial
banks on the failure of the CBN to perform its regulatory duties.
A member from Kogi State, Mr. Tajudeen Yusuf, moved a motion
on how banks had abused the N65 ATM charge customers paid after the third
withdrawal from platforms other than those of their banks.
He informed the House that many banks were charging
customers for every withdrawal as against the CBN’s rule that the N65 should
apply after the third withdrawal.
He argued that banks were “defrauding Nigerians through
these illegal and indiscriminate charges”.
Yusuf said, “This is happening and the CBN, the regulator,
is looking the other way, while customers are losing money. The N65 may look
small, but when you multiply it by the millions of bank customers we have in
this country, then, you will understand what they are losing to the banks.
“There are 80 million bank customers in Nigeria and about
half of them use the ATM. The CBN must enforce its regulation.”
A member from Kano State, Mr. Aminu Suleiman, asked the CBN
to investigate the matter and ensure that fraudulent deductions were returned
to customers.
“The N65 deduction seems to be ordinary, but when you make
frequent withdrawals, you will realise that it is no longer ordinary. The worry
is that the CBN is not doing anything about it. Banks must be made to refund
every fraudulent deduction,” Suleiman added.
Another member, Mr. Israel Ajibola told the House that the
aim of deploying the ATMs for ease of withdrawals had been defeated by the
actions of some banks.
He cited a case of banks that programmed their ATMs not to
dispense more than N10,000.
“This means that for a customer who wants to withdraw
N50,000, for instance, he must withdraw N10,000 in five places. He pays N65 in
multiple charges, which is a clear breach of regulation,” Ajibola stated.
One member, Mr. Uzoma Nkem-Abonta urged the House to summon
the Governor of the CBN, Mr. Godwin Emefiele, to explain why it was difficult
for the central bank to regulate the banks.
“Lack of monitoring by the CBN is the problem. Let us summon
the CBN governor,” he said.
Mr. Nnana Igbokwe noted that there were “several other
fraudulent charges” the banks placed on depositors, which the CBN condoned,
adding that “the undue ATM deductions and other related charges must stop.”
The House, which was presided over by the Speaker, Mr.
Yakubu Dogara, directed its Committee on Banking and Currency to submit a
report on the matter within one week.
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