Tag: fighting

  • Youths’ involvement in crime fighting advocated

    The Technical Assistant to Ebonyi State Governor Dave Umahi, Mr. Emmanuel Aja, has advocated involvement of youths in the fight against crime.

    Aja, who is also the president-general, Ishiagu Youths Development Association (IYDA), told News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) youths knew the communities and people in the communities, hence involving them in crime fighting and control would yield positive result.

    He said: “Security challenges in our communities demand collaboration and cooperation between the police and leadership of the communities, if the war against crime will be won.

    “The inclusion of more youths in the security architecture of the state is pivotal for achieving a crime free society, because every criminal comes from a village and members of a community know themselves.

    “Therefore, the government should involve more youths under the local government area vigilance arrangement to assist in crime fighting, control and prevention.’’

    Aja hailed the government for supporting security agencies and vigilance groups, saying it contributed to the reduction in crimes.

    He appealed to local government chairmen and town union leaders to support government’s efforts by approving and funding vigilance groups.

    “The governor recently donated 16-seater buses to the government approved vigilance groups in 13 local governments.

    “His efforts must be complemented by council chairmen and town union leaders to position vigilance outfits to provide effective service to the rural populace.’’

    The governor’s aide said police breakthrough in the arrest of notorious kidnap and robbery suspects in parts of the state was made possible by involvement of vigilance groups.

  • The prince who died fighting

    The prince who died fighting

    Tributes continued yesterday for the gallant officer who died fighting Boko Haram on Friday.

    Unknown to many, Lt.-Col. Muhammad Abu-Ali was a prince whose father is a retired officer. His father is Etsu of Bassa- Nge Kingdom (Kogi State), Brig.-Gen. Abu-Ali (retd.).

    on September 9, 2015, the Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai, visited Gamboru Ngala, which had just been recaptured from Boko Haram terrorists after a fierce battle. He wanted to see things for himself.

    But the COAS had another motive — to personally decorate one of his men, “a war hero, a quiet but fiercely dedicated officer”, Major Abu-Ali —who had been granted an accelerated promotion to Lt.-Colonel.

    Under the cover of darkness, the COAS decorated Abu-Ali, who was surrounded by his men, many of them belonging to what is referred to as “the other rank” with his new rank.  Ali saluted smartly, shook hands with the COAS and saluted again.

    The COAS was lavish in his praise of Lt.-Col. Abu-Ali. He recounted his many brave acts in the war against Boko Haram.

    What followed was one of the most enduring moments in the history of the war against Boko Haram. Lt.-Col. Abu-Ali ran into the waiting arms of his men, who grabbed him and lifted him off the ground. They were shouting and singing.

    This appellation was not bestowed on him for nothing, in the fight against Boko Haram, Lt.-Col. Abu-Ali’s name is written in gold. He participated in every battle, always at the head of his men.

    In early February 2015, the Army faced the arduous task to recapture Baga town from Boko Haram terrorists who had established a Caliphate of the most extreme form of Islam. Baga was a fortress for Boko Haram and any  battalion unsure of itself would merely be on suicide mission if  it tried to regain Baga.

    The Army found solace and courage in a “smallish guy” with the rank of a Major.

    Abu- Ali is an unconventional choice to lead the battle into Baga. If you met him, he would have a lot of explanations to do to convince you he is a soldier.

    Abu- Ali is smallish in stature, with a round and unassuming expression. One cannot but notice his pale skin, big eyeballs and sparse frame. No; Abu Ali cannot be a soldier, one would say.

    So, it was this unusual candidate that led the battle into Baga. It was according to Acting Director Army Public Relations Col. Sani Usman, one of the fiercest battles against Boko Haram.

    But Abu -Ali won the war despite all odds and took back the strategic town.

    Tactical, intelligent, Sophisticated.

    So how did Abu- Ali achieved the impossible? According to several colleagues, journalists, subordinates who spoke to The Nation, Abu- Ali was one of the finest tacticians in the Army.

    “Abu -Ali does not believe only in the quantity of the troops or the numerical strength he believes in tactics,” one said of him.

    Abu -Ali was a tank expert. His philosophy of war modelled the modern realities where emphasis is on equipment than men.

    This was Abu -Ali’s successful strategy in Baga. He used it again when he captured Monguno.

    “ He told us not to worry that we would only need to do five percent of the work, that the remaining 95 percent he would do with tanks,” the soldier told an online medium after the battle.

    Abu -Ali believed that there was no need for “unnecessary loss of lives” when machines could do the job. He was an expert tanker and was said to always lead his men in his own tank. In Baga, he led with the T-72 second generation tank.

    No formation could stand in the way of Abu -Ali and his furious tanks, town after town fell to his superior strategy, courage and determination.

    The fear of Abu -Ali was the beginning of Boko Haram’s wisdom, say many commentators. Referred to as the albatross of Boko Haram, he would drive his tanks against a column of insurgents, destroy their IEDs and save the lives of his soldiers.

    Abu -Ali also conducted many operations against the insurgents deep into Sambisa forest, clearing insurgents camps one after the other.

    Pray, stay alert, stay alive

    Abu- Ali had an uncommon relationship with his officers and men, many of whom hardly speak well of the establishment. In the Operation Lafiya Dole (peace by force) which is responsible for the fight against Boko Haram, Abu-Ali was loved, almost to a fault.

    He not only fought side by side with his men, he was prepared to lay down his life for them. “Pray, stay alert, Stay alive” were his usual charge to his men. He would tell them that if anyone should die, it would be him.

    That was exactly what happened last Friday when it all ended for Abu –Ali.  Abu- Ali and the men of 272 Tank Battalion had done extremely well in curtailing what the army called “remnants of Boko Haram”.

    Mallam Fatori had been a Boko Haram stronghold, but Abu-Ali dislodged the terrorists but intermittently, “remnants” of the insurgents would attack the army’s position.

    On Friday, they came again, this time in large numbers. Sources said Abu-Ali recognised the precarious position he was in and quickly called for reinforcement.

    No one has been able to tell how Abu -Ali died. He reportedly died fighting. Four soldiers died with him. Four were injured. Fourteen terrorists died.

    A source said Abu-Ali would have been alive if he had not been devoted to his men. He would not leave them, he would not accept any special treatment or right to live.

    His duty was his life, when colleagues recall his exploits he would assume a furlong look, unable to process why he would be singled out for special recognition.

    Many were stunned when the picture of Abu-Ali’s body arrived from the war front in a body bag, flown in an Air Force helicopter. A parade of soldiers saluting the body as it was wheeled past. It was a touching spectacle.

    A nation mourns

    On the day Abu-Ali died, Kogi State Governor Yahaya Bello was one of the first to commiserate with the military and his family. Ali’s death was a big loss to th state (he was and indegene) and  the Etsu of Bassa-Nge Kingdom.

    Bello said: “He was a gallant officer who served the nation with his all and paid the supreme price by laying down his life for the peace of the country. He will be remembered for his sacrifice and  commitment to the cause of the Nigerian Army to rid the country of insurgency which has been a source of concern to every one.

    “Kogi State and indeed Nigerians will never forget your gallantry as you led a team of the Nigerian Army to recapture Baga from the control of terrorists and you died while in active service, gallant soldier.”

    The tributes poured in from those who knew him and those who did not. It is impossible to measure in words the outpouring of grief and anger which enveloped the nation at Abu-Ali’s death.

    Acting Director, Defence Information, Brig.-General Rabe Abubakar, told The Nation: “Ali served his country very well to the extent of sacrificing his life for his dear country. He said it is better for him to die than  lose his subordinates. Very courageous, quiet but focused  and highly professional and intelligent. The Nigerian military in general and Nigerian Army in particular  will miss him.”

    Defence Minister Mansur Muhammad Dan-Ali described  the death of  Abu-Ali as “tragic and unfortunate”.

    In a press release made available to The Nation, he prayed God to grant the war hero eternal rest.

    “Defence Minster describes Lt.-Col. Abu-Ali  as a major pillar in the war against terrorism and insurgency in the Northeast. He also expresses his condolences to the father of the deceased,  Etsu of Bassa- Nge Kingdom (Kogi State), Brig.-Gen. Abu-Ali (retd), his young family and the Nigerian Army,” the statement read.

    The late Lt.-Col. Abu -Ali would be given a hero’s burial today, but it will be a celebration of his short life, of his dedication, commitment and love for fellow human. He left behind his father, Brig. Gen. Abu-Ali (rtd), the Etsu of Bassa-Nge, a young wife and three children.

     

  • ‘No Fighting’ campaign ‘ll deepen insurance’

    African Reinsurance Corporation (AfricaRe) ‘No Fighting’ campaign is to  sensitise the public on the benefits of insurance policies.

    Unveiling the campaign at its head office in Lagos, the firm’s Deputy Managing Director and Chief Operating Officer, Mr. Ken Aghoghovbia, said the campaign was imperative since many Nigerians still dìd not take insurance policies.

    He said in spite of Nigeria’s huge population, insurance penetration remained very low.

    According to him, while insurance penetration rate is 0.3 per cent in Nigeria, of about 12 million vehicles on the roads, only 4.3 million have genuine insurance certificates.

    Reiterating the corporations’ resolve to foster the development of the insurance and reinsurance industry in Africa, Aghoghovbia expressed the hope that the campaign would go a long way in educating Nigerians on the benefits of policies.

    “The campaign aims at developing an integrated behavioural change to enhance the effort made by the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) and the Nigerian Insurance Association to bridge the knowledge, experience and perception gaps in the nation’s insurance market.

    “AfricaRe decided to invest in creating awareness about the insurance industry because there is a dearth of knowledge among the general populace,” he said.

  • ‘Why I’m fighting for detainees’

    ‘Why I’m fighting for detainees’

    Ahmed Adetola-Kazeem is the son of Gani Adetola-Kazeem (SAN). He was called to the Bar seven years ago. A member of the Board of Trustees of the Lagos Public Interest Law Partnership (LPILP) and Director, Prisoners’ Rights Advocacy Initiative (PRAI), he tells ADEBISI ONANUGA why he followed his father’s footsteps

    Unlike his peers, Ahmed Adetola-Kazeem chose to champion the cause of the less privileged. For years, he has been at the vanguard of ensuring that suspects awaiting trial do not stay in prison custody longer than is necessary. This he does through his organisation, the Prisoners’ Rights Advocacy Initiative (PRAI).

    His decision to advocate for this less privileged was mooted when, while still in the university as a law student, he  visited the Ijebu-Ode prisons under the auspices of Nigeria Association of Muslim Law Students.

    “During the visit we heard the harrowing experiences of inmates of the prison and there and then I promised the inmates and myself to take up advocacy for the rights of inmates and others whose rights are abused whenever I am called to the bar,” he said.

    His National Youth Service year in Abia state offered him the first opportunity to fulfill this dream when he represented poor inmates in court and successfully secured their release.

    One of those freed was an orphan who had spent over seven years awaiting trial and had become partially blind.

    He and other lawyers partnered with Lagos State to establish the Lagos Public Interest Law Partnership (LPILP),  aimed at assisting those who can’t afford legal services, particularly awaiting trial inmates.

    He highlighted some cases handled by his NGO. “We filed an action on behalf of 106 inmates of Kirikiri maximum prison and  most of them were eventually released.

    “We also advocated the release of some underage inmates sentenced to 390 days in prison by the Lagos Environmental and Special offences  court in Alausa and kept in Kirikiri Maximum prison in 2013,” he said.

    Adetola-Kazeem said he took to law because his father wanted him to study law, which he also wanted.

    “I didn’t have to do much. I also had to make him happy since none of my older siblings studied law,” he stated.

    He however remarked  that If he had not done Law, he would have done Psychology and or joined the Military.

    “My father is a lawyer and growing up I wanted to be like him. So the decision to become a lawyer came naturally. Also, I wasn’t good in sciences and anything that had to do with calculation, so the only safe haven to progress in Senior Secondary School was to ‘quarantine’ myself in arts class.

    “When I got to the University, seeing the injustice being perpetuated around, I was emboldened to take up the profession as a passion in order to give voice to the voiceless and that I have been able to do within the limit of my resources,” he said.

    He recalled that his first appearance in court was before Honourable Justice Abai of the High Court of Justice, Abia State in the Abia Judicial Division during his NYSC assignment in January 2010.

    He said he experienced no fright but was “very relaxed because of the drilling I received at the law school and also because of my background.”

    The PRAI Executive Directror have quite a number of persons he admired in the profession. His role models include his father, the late Chief Gani Fawehinmi (SAN), the late Bamidele Aturu, Mr Femi Falana (SAN), Mr Abdul-Jelil Owonikoko (SAN), Mr. Yemi Candide Johnson ( SAN), Mr Gbenga Oyebode, as well as his mentors, Justice Habeeb Abiru of the Court of Appeal and Hon. Justice Babatunde Adejumo of the National Industrial Court.

    “If I can combine the attributes of these great men, then I will be rest assured of being a forerunner in my generation,” he said.

    Adetola-Kazeem regretted that  corruption has becpome an embarrassment to the legal provision and sees it is a reflection of the decay in the fabric of our national existence.

    “I believe the posture of the current government on corruption will assist a lot in cleansing the rot in the judiciary. There are still a lot of Judicial officers who are upright, and I think such people should be encouraged,” he said.

    On his most embarrassing court experience, he said: “My boss, Mr. Obiora Obianwu ( SAN) handed me three files to attend to in Court the next day. as matter of practice I ensure I study my files well to avoid any surprise in Court. However on this faithful day, I had a clear instruction from my boss to take an adjournment in one of the cases which was slated for trial. On getting to Court, I indicated that the trial will not be going on because my boss who wants to handle the case personally is not in town.

    “The opposing counsel insisted that the matter must go on and the Judge, Hon. Justice Abai agreed with him. I was sweating profusely not knowing what to do in the circumstance. One of the lawyers in court advised me to ask for a stand down to enable me familiarize myself with the file. I followed his advice and the Court granted my request. I went out of the Court with the very bulky file and yet could not make any sense out of the contents as the matter was filed under the old dispensation when there was no front loading of processes.

    “I put a call through to my boss, who then instructed a senior in chambers, Mr Dozie Ogunji to come and lead me. When he came, he simply spoke with the Counsel on the other side to allow the Court Adjourn. Surprisingly the Counsel obliged him simply because they were from the same town,” he recalled.

    In the next 10 years, he hoped  to have made very outstanding and unrivaled contributions to the development of the law and the course of humanity. I hope that I would have been elevated to the rank of Senior Advocate of Nigeria”, he said in addition.

     

  • Police arrest Okada riders for fighting

    Police arrest Okada riders for fighting

    IVE commercial motorcyclists aka Okada riders were yesterday arrested by the police for fighting.

    One of the Okada men was stabbed on the hand by a colleague. The incident happened on Fatai Atere Way in Matori, Lagos, around 5pm.

    An eyewitness said: “They are always fighting. They are trouble makers. None of us knows what happened but it began as a slight argument and I think one of them hit the other. In retaliation, he stabbed the first person in the hand with a broken bottle and blood spewed out from his hand. We told them to take him to the hospital but they refused. That was when the patrol police came to arrest them”.

    Another eyewitness said. “Even the taxi drivers around the place decry the menace of the Okada riders because of their trouble. We have been here for many years. They cannot go a month without fighting and we hope it would not result to death one day. The blood is on the floor everywhere. There have been times when they beat us up too. We have been patient with them enough. Whenever they see a woman pass by, they would harass her.

    “We want the government to find another park for them. Whenever we want to drive in or out, there is always an issue. If we confront them, they would just hurl abuses at us. We are tired of them being here.”

  • Buhari fighting for unborn generations, says APC chief

    An elder statesman and governorship aspirant in Bayelsa State All Progressives Congress (APC), Dr. Imoro Kubor, yesterday said President Muhammadu Buhari is fighting to save the future of Nigeria.

    Kubor, who holds a doctorate degree in Aeronautics Engineering, said it was by God’s grace that Buhari became a President at a time Nigeria nearly collapsed.

    He said: “It is by the grace of God that Buhari should come into government at this point in time. Nigerians should support him because what he is fighting for is for generations unborn. It is a selfless service.”

    Kubor served Nigeria in various capacities and retired as Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Aviation.

    The APC chieftain said the President had demonstrated his belief in democracy and the rule of law, adding that before President Buhari’s election, the rule of law was absent in the polity.

    He urged Nigerians not to forget how the country was run before Buhari became the President.

    According to him, without encouraging the President to bring sanity to the country, Nigeria will go the way of Iraq.

    On his ambition to govern Bayelsa State, Kubor said he joined the governorship race to tackle mass unemployment.

    The APC chieftain said a lack of jobs had driven many youths into criminal activities and made them think that the only way to survive was through militancy.

    He said unemployment was one of the reasons for massive oil pollution caused by peipeline vandalism and illegal refining of crude oil.

    Kubor said: “People open pipelines but they can’t close them properly. There is total disappearance of living things in the environment. It will take generations to clean up the state. The President is concerned about this and he wants to stop it.”

    The APC aspirant said instead of engaging in projects and programmes to create jobs, successive administrations wasted money on unproductive ventures.

  • Buhari appointments: Fighting  fire with fire

    Buhari appointments: Fighting fire with fire

    ABOUT one week after President Muhammadu Buhari made his last set of appointments, and raised quite a storm in the process, the controversy is threatening to become sectional. On August 27, the president had appointed six close staff, including the Secretary to the Government of the Federation and  the Chief of Staff, and heads of the Customs and Immigration. Many commentators and politicians, particularly from the Southeast, criticised the appointments, which they said were skewed, insensitive and sectional. President Buhari appointed those he could trust and who merited the offices they were given, argued his supporters, party and aides. The presidency further explained that the appointments were just starting, and no one, let alone ethnic groups, would be short-changed. When all is said and done, All Progressives Congress (APC) spokesmen enthused, everything and all the appointments would balance out.

    While it is uncertain that the Southeast could be persuaded by the president’s arguments, some northern groups have rallied robustly to his defence. One group in particular, the Concerned Elders of the North (CEN), flung in the public face a list of offices occupied by southeastern and South-South appointees under the Goodluck Jonathan presidency. In the CEN list, the Southeast and South-South virtually colonised the ‘commanding heights’ of both the economy and politics. In two ministries, for example, according to the list, the Southeast was shown to have suffocated other sections of the country, claiming that all appointments were done on merit.

    If the list were to be elongated, hinted CEN, some other startling facts could be unearthed, alarming and discomfiting very many people, including beneficiaries and victims of the arbitrariness of federal appointments in Nigeria. The CEN list came up with about 35 Jonathan federal appointments in almost perfect counterpoise to the 31 or so Buhari appointments. There seems to be some weird logic in fighting fire with fire, number with number, and zone with zone.

    But the exertions of the shadowy elders from the North were quixotic. Their list of the Jonathan era appointments was probably accurate but disturbing, just as the Buhari list has perplexed many and injured sectional feelings. Both lists speak ingloriously to the schisms disemboweling the country such that after many epochal crises, a civil war, and the ethical and material pillage undertaken by successive military regimes, lessons have not been learnt, nor have Nigerian leaders seemed capable of summoning the sensitivity, balance and altruism that the high offices they occupy demand.

    It is curious how history is repeating itself in the controversies accompanying the appointments. To answer allegations of skewed appointments under Dr Jonathan, the former Minister of Finance, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, argued passionately that merit and nothing else was responsible for the seeming slant. No one should blame the Southeast for being so successful in ‘meriting’ the appointments, she added in pained excitement. Explaining the current appointments, President Buhari and his aides have also suggested that nothing but merit was responsible for the slant so far. Merit, it seems, is the new boondoggle. It will be done to death in explaining appointments before this decade is over.

    As the country emerges from President Buhari’s controversial appointments and Dr Jonathan’s equally indefensible structuring of his presidency and federal establishments, the lessons of history may serve some useful purpose. Not too long ago in 1975, former head of state Gen Murtala Mohammed chose a young lieutenant, Akintunde Akinsehinwa, as his Aide-de-Camp. Since then an ADC has not been lower in rank than a Lt.-Col., and preferably ethnically closer home. It appears the journey to true nationhood will be long and turbulent. Nor are there guarantees, going by what Dr Jonathan and his predecessors and successors did, that the lessons history teaches will be learnt or even acknowledged.

  • Three women docked for ‘public fighting’

    A Chief Magistrate’s Court in Ebute Meta, Lagos, yesterday, ordered three women to be remanded in Kirikiri Prison for allegedly fighting in public until they meet their bail conditions.

    Magistrate M.O. Olajuwon granted the accused: Adeshola Lawal, 28, Abiodun Onwuneme, 23 and Fadiat Ayinde, 19, bail in the sum of N50,000 each.

    She said the bail was with one surety each who must be blood relations.

    The three are facing charge of fighting in public to which they pleaded not guilty.

    Prosecuting Sergeant Emmanuel Ajayi, said the offence was committed at Atitebi Street, Ebute Meta on August 17.

    He said that the accused fought in public over a trivial issue.

    “Ayinde accosted Onwuneme who is pregnant and started making mockery of her. She called her a prostitute that was carrying a fatherless child. Ayinde said Onwuneme was wayward hence was pregnant and sent out of home.

    “Lawal, who is a close friend of Onwuneme, didn’t like the insults. She joined to fight Ayinde,’’ Ajayi said.

    The offence, according to the prosecutor, contravened Section 54 of the Criminal Law.

    The case was adjourned till September 9 for mention.

  • ‘Why they’re fighting us,’ by PMAN interim boss

    ‘Why they’re fighting us,’ by PMAN interim boss

    Sequel to the statement denouncing Pretty Okafor as interim president of Performing Musicians Association of Nigeria (PMAN), despite a court ruling, Okafor said his critics are merely afraid he would make them accountable.

    The association’s Chairman, Caretaker Committee, Kevin Lucciano, had filed a suit at the Federal High Court, Lagos, challenging Okafor’s appointment as PMAN president. In suit no FHC/L/CS/919/2012, the committee is calling on the court to set aside its earlier judgment, for want of jurisdiction.

    According to Lucciano, the appointment of Okafor did not follow due process and so should be ignored by all.

    “I want to use this opportunity to remind Nigerians and all PMAN stakeholders of the fact that it is only the Caretaker Committee that has been empowered by the Ministry of Labour and Productivity to conduct elections and run the affairs of PMAN… besides, this matter is not within the jurisdiction of the court as it is a trade union issue and only the National Industrial Court has jurisdiction at this stage,” he said.

    Okafor, a member of the Junior and Pretty fame, however, expressed shock at the latest development.

    “I don’t want to join issues with them on going contrary to the court’s judgment,” he said. “I personally met with them and it was unanimously agreed that the new order should subside. So I must confess that I’m surprised that some of them went back to the trenches to reopen the wound that has retrogressed the association for the past 34 years.’’

    Okafor said he accepted to pilot the new ship of PMAN out of his passion to champion a formidable music industry, but added: ‘’I’ve sat down and thoroughly thought of why they detoured on our earlier agreement and could only deduce a few reasons, which include the money and property of the association in their possession which they were requested to account for or return.’’

    According to him, while ex-President, Tee Mac Itsueli, is in possession of the Certificate of Occupancy of their landed property in Abuja, Murphy still keeps their automobile while Peace Committee boss, Kevin Luciano is alleged to be in possession of an undisclosed amount of money.

    “Members of the association rightly demanded that they should return everything to the association but from the way they are behaving, it’s like they don’t want to comply. Hence,the new offensive they are launching against a constituted authority with the backing of the judiciary,’’ he said.

    He, however, said that part of his new executive’s plans to move the union forward is the implementation of a biometric identity card scheme that will see each member truly belong, and in the event of any handicap or death, be entitled to the sum of N10 million.

  • Fighting a ‘common enemy’

    Fighting a ‘common enemy’

    For banks, frauds and forgeries are a big challenge. No matter what banks do to avoid these problems, they still rear their heads. Does that mean there is no way out? Stakeholders believe there is. At the Nigeria Electronic Fraud Forum (NeFF) conference in Lagos last week, they proffered the way out of the quagmire, writes COLLINS NWEZE.

     Many view banks with suspicion and the reason is obvious. It is believed that banks are the citadel of frauds, forgeries, among others. This is why some people do not put their money in banks. But are banks that bad? They may not be that bad, but their reputation is not helping matters.

    Banks too know that they are held in low esteem. This is what may have prompted them to take steps to curb fraud in the sector.

    Data obtained from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) showed that in 2012, banks received and processed 6,274 complaints, via e-mails on various financial crimes, particularly advanced fee fraud.  There were 4,527 cases of fraud and forgery involving N14.8 billion and $1.6 million.

    The CBN also received and investigated four complaints against commercial banks. The cases were reported to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for investigation. Globally, estimated credit card fraud stood at $11 billion in 2012, making it one of the most significant criminal developments in modern times.

    These fraud statistics prompted the Nigeria Electronic Fraud Forum (NeFF) to take steps to stem the practice.

    Last weekend, the NeFF which comprises banks, Nigeria Interbank Settlement System, the Police and EFCC met in Lagos to discuss the way forward.

    Piqued by the rising electronic fraud (e-fraud), the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of Enterprise Bank Limited, Mallam Ahmed Kuru, called on banks to establish anti-fraud departments to curb the menace.

    Delivering a keynote address titled: “When all goes wrong: Mediation and arbitration best practices,” Kuru, represented by Head, Strategy & Corporate Transformation, Chuks Ekpunobi, said it was time for banks to collaborate to eradicate e-fraud, which he described as a “common enemy.”

    He said electronic fraud has been in an upward swinng since 2010 and needed to be checked. He said this was worrisome because the increase is in terms of the number, volume and sophistication driven by high powered technology. Unfortunately, however, he argued that bankers, auditors and internal control officials of financial institutions may not be as knowledgeable as the fraudsters.

    “Therefore, if we are to make progress in this direction, banks need to, as a matter of urgency, establish anti-fraud departments with staff that would always be ahead of the fraudsters in every sense of the word.

    “Every financial institution should take the issue seriously because this year alone, the industry has lost about N2 billion to electronic fraud from the first and second quarters. Should this trend continue, about N5 billion would be the estimated loss by the end of 2014. If this is not checked, the trend will lead to unbearable levels of capital erosion in the system,” he said.

    The establishment of anti-fraud units, he said, will provide continuous improvement initiatives in fraud control and present a platform for the implementation of viable fraud management solution to highlight deviations of fraudulent transactions from normal transactions; ensure compliance to Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCIDSS) initiatives of the CBN as well as guarantee the implementation of other Fraud Control measures and Security initiatives both on the network, and applications of the bank. It will also ensure the implementation of a Database Access Monitory (DAM) and Account Access Monitory (AAM) solutions, among others.

    While commending the organisers for choosing to deliberate on this trend that is plaguing the industry, Kuru said he sees the establishment of the NeFF as a collective step in the right direction in the attempt to eradicate e-Fraud in the financial sector because NeFF provides the opportunity for practitioners to share knowledge about global trend in e-Faud, industry trend as well as new methods of perpetrating fraud among other issues that affect every bank. He argued that this was the only way banks can protect their funds from relentless fraudsters.

    Interswitch, an electronic transaction switching and payment processing company called for an upgrade in the technology, processes and systems to proactively detect suspicious activities in place.

    In response to emailed questions, the firm said cardholders also need to be constantly educated on keeping their banking details fully protected.

    The firm said this has become important because fraudsters keep developing new fraud mechanisms to circumvent new security measures. The firm claimed it has adopted and holds certifications in the highest standards available in the payment card industry. “In terms of card standards, we are EMV 4.0 certified and in terms of security, we are Card Industry Data Security Standard certification (PCIDSS) V3 certified. We have also attained ISO 9001:2000 for our processing services,” it said.

    Continuing, it said aside such certifications, its Verve product, has a unique feature for card-not-present transactions.

    “A card-not-present transaction is a payment card transaction made where the cardholder is not physically present with the card at the time that the payment is affected. In order to safe guard cardholders when conducting card-not-present, we have introduced SafeToken. SafeToken is an online security technology that protects customers against unauthorised use of their cards via the web through the generation of One-time passwords (OTPs),” it said.

    Interswitch also said as a second layer of defence, it has also introduced Scorebridge which is a fraud management system that enables Electronic Financial Transaction (EFT) messages to be processed through predefined Artificial Intelligence in order to determine the transaction’s risk and probability of a fraud. This enables the monitoring of card patterns and declines suspicious transactions.

    “Banking security has got so many banks thinking about safety and reliability of their networks. What steps do you think that lenders need to take to guarantee customers’ transaction security and trust? Over the years, the banks have invested a lot in different security measures to guarantee customer transactions, but as a minimum, all banks should have the following measures in place: Defining a baseline security standard (such as PCIDSS) Educating customers on safe security practices when using their cards Investing in a fraud management system,” it said.

    On the cash-less policy instituted by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), it said the direct cost of handling, processing and managing cash across the nation as at 2009, stood at N114 billion and could have increased if the cashless policy had not been introduced.

    “The good thing we have also done as stakeholders in the e-payment industry are to also introduce solutions that would drive adoption of the cash-less policy. These solutions have been designed to address the specific needs of the ordinary Nigerian towards the adoption of e-payment,” it said.

    Founder and Managing Director, DataPro Limited Abimbola Adeseyoju said criminals know that there are compliance procedures, such as Know Your Customer (KYC). They, therefore, come prepared, hence the need for lenders to go the extra mile in verifying their customers’ identities.

    He said fraudsters either modify their identity slightly, or create a synthetic identity which can be detected through a Link Analysis Solution. This applies advanced analysis to determine the risk level for both the network and every individual associated with the network, he said.

    Examples of attributes that could be shared and linked are Personal Identity Information, Account Information and Transactional Information.

    “Once the entities are linked together, advanced analytics are applied to determine the level of risk and create a risk score. The i2 Notebook used by the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIUs), among others, enables them to search multiple data sources simultaneously, find hidden links and entities and visualise transactions and timelines,” he said.

    Adeseyoju advised financial institutions to pay special attention to all complex, unusually large transactions, or unusual patterns of transactions that have no visible economic or lawful purpose. Continuing, he said the lenders should investigate suspicious transaction and report its findings to the NFIU immediately.

    However, Deposit Money Banks (DMBs) have continued to promote and support the CBN KYC initiative. The lenders, analysts said, are omitting huge funds into the KYC project because of its immense benefits in fighting fraud.

     

    CBN’s actions

    Aware of these dangers, the CBN decided to set up a five-year Information Technology (IT) Standards for banks. John Ayoh, CBN Director, Information Technology, said the exercise would help banks identify and adopt global IT Standards that address industry problems. He said banks are expected to implement the plan on continuous basis and in accordance with set timelines.

    CBN said the introduction of chip and pin payment cards have led to drastic drop in ATM card fraud.  It said the CBN and other relevant institutions have been able to reduce card frauds considerably by instituting ATM Fraud Prevention Group and the NeFF. The groups are to enable banks to collaboratively share data on fraud attempts and proactively tackle them to reduce losses.

    The CBN also instructed banks to set and implement mandatory daily limits for ATM cash withdrawal, while other related transactions, including POS and Web purchases should be subjected to stringent limit as agreed and documented between the banks and customers. It said it is the responsibility of the banks to ensure that a trigger is automatically initiated when limits are exceeded.

    Speaking at the Committee of Chief Compliance Officers of Banks in Nigeria (CCCOBIN) in Lagos, Emefiele said Nigeria has adequate legal and regulatory measures that should address breaches to the KYC, Customer Due Diligence (CDD) and Enhanced Customer Due Diligence (EDD) provisions.

    “It is the application of these KYC provisions that are meant to reveal illegitimate sources of funds and trigger investigation by relevant stakeholders that matters. Like in many developing countries, compliance has been a major regulatory challenge in Nigeria,” he said.