NDIC moves against greedy bankers

The Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) is advocating for stringent sanctions against banks with weak or poor corporate governance to discourage bankers from greedy behaviours
A statement from the NDIC said the Managing Director/Chief Executive of the NDIC Alhaji Umaru Ibrahim while reviewing “the various laws governing banking operations in Nigeria i.e the Banks and Other Financial Act 1991, the Companies and Allied Matters Act, the NDIC Act, the CBN Act and the Failed Banks Act expressed the need for more stringent sanctions to serve as deterrent to irresponsible and greedy behaviours.”
The statement from the NDIC signed by Mallam Hadi Birchi, Head, Communication and Public Affairs said Umaru Ibrahim “cited the case of the recent move by the regulatory authority in the United Kingdom to enhance supervision and management of banks with emphasis on personal responsibilities of directors. In this regard, both the UK companies Acts 2006 and the recent tough new banking rules are compelling some bank directors to rethink their suitability and competence to remain as bank directors. Some board directors actually resigned.”
Ibrahim noted that in their bid to establish a robust and stable financial system to promote national development, supervisory and regulatory authorities also accorded priority attention to sound corporate governance in their own operations.
Already, some of the initiatives put in place by the NDIC to promote sound corporate governance, Ibrahim said, “included adoption of a charter and code of corporate governance for its Board, compliance with the code of corporate governance for all regulators under the auspices of the Financial Services Regulation Coordinating Committee, code of conduct for its bank examiners and compliance with provisions of relevant Acts of Federal Government on disclosure and accountability.”
Alhaji Umaru Ibrahim gave the charge while delivering an address at the 2015 Executive Breakfast Meeting of the Society for Corporate Governance in Nigeria, where he identified the failure of sound corporate governance as one of the factors responsible for the 2009 Nigerian banking crisis.
Ibrahim recalled that the special examination conducted on the 24 banks in Nigeria by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and NDIC revealed that 10 of the 24 banks were critically distressed as a result of many factors amongst which was poor corporate governance.
According to him: “the special examination revealed that boards and executive managements in some banks were not equipped to run their institutions as their ineffectiveness manifested in the form overbearing influence of some board members, ineffectiveness of board committees; non-adherence to the CBN code of corporate governance and weak ethical standards amongst others.”

More posts