Fraudsters shop abroad with cloned Nigerian ATM cards
Facts
emerged on Tuesday that electronic fraudsters had been duplicating
Automated Teller Machine cards belonging to Nigerian bank customers and
using them to buy items worth millions of dollars from shopping malls in
the United States.
Top officials of the Central Bank of
Nigeria told our correspondent that the development had made Nigerian
banks and their customers to be losing millions of naira to the e-fraud.
The development, it was learnt, had
become so overwhelming and that top executives of the banks and senior
officials of the CBN had to meet with a team of Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission operatives led by the director of operations in Abuja
on Tuesday.
According to sources close to the
meeting, the banks are seeking the assistance of the anti-graft agency
to help in arresting some of the fraudsters who are using the duplicated
ATM cards in the US.
From the outcome of the meeting, the
EFCC is set to collaborate with a sister agency in the US in order to
effect the arrest of some of the electronic fraudsters.
The source disclosed, “Banks have been
losing a lot of money to electronic fraudster cartels who are using
customers’ ATM cards to fraudulently buy items across shopping malls in
the US.
“Normally, customers should bear the
loss but because banks don’t want the issue to come to the public so
that the use of ATM cards will not be discouraged, they settle those
customers by paying the money.”
Asked how the Nigerian ATM cards are
being duplicated and used in the US, a source close to the development
explained, “In Nigeria, we use chip and PIN, but the US still uses
magnetic stripe. So, what those fraudsters do is to get the details of a
customers’ ATM card, duplicate it and then go to shopping malls and
start using it to buy items.
“When they are using the PoS in US
shopping malls, all they do is to swipe the card and then payment is
made. They don’t need to put any PIN. Through these, items are bought
using Nigerian ATM cards.”
An EFCC source, who spoke under the
condition of anonymity, confirmed the meeting and noted the anti-graft
agency was set to work with the US government to arrest the fraudsters.
A top official in one of the top banks
said the incidence of electronic frauds had been on the increase and the
development was a source of worry to bank executives.
It was learnt that most of the frauds were being perpetrated in connivance with some bank officials.
The official recalled that prior to 2010
when Nigerian banks were still using magnetic stripe for ATM cards; the
issue of using Nigerian ATM cards fraudulently abroad was prevalent.
However, when the banking sector migrated to the chip and PIN system, the problem stopped.
“However, the frauds have started again
now in a new form of Nigerian ATM cards being duplicated and used
abroad. The incidence is becoming very high now and something has to be
done urgently to arrest the trend,” the banker added.
Analysts have said that the increasing incidence of electronic frauds may affect the growth of the cash-less Nigeria initiative.
The Deputy Governor, Corporate Services,
CBN, Mr. Adebayo Adelabu, recently said at a conference that the
incidence of fraud involving bank officials had been on the increase.
Adelabu, who is a former Executive
Director of First Bank of Nigeria, linked the increasing frauds in the
banking sector to several issues, including the banks’ poor recruitment
procedures and failure to prosecute workers involved in fraudulent
activities for fear of reputational risk.
The Chairman, Chartered Institute of
Bankers of Nigeria, Lagos branch, Mr. Abolade Agbola, linked the high
incidence of electronic frauds to lack of integrity and poor staff
conditions in the banking sector.
“When you see the fraud that happens and
the trillions of transactions that take place daily, then I think the
banks have to take the technology ahead, take the staffing ahead and
then create a future for the members of staff so that they can know that
they have a future in the organisations and that they can build a
future,” he said.
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