Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) now dispense counterfeit currencies,
particularly the N1000 notes, which is the highest denomination in the
country.
A drama played out last week in Lagos when a customer
who withdrew money from an old generation bank went to another bank few
metres away to deposit part of the money in another bank, but was
shocked when the cashier told him that some of the N1000 notes were
fake. Efforts to explain the source of the money were rebuffed. The
cashier and customers in that bank confirmed that the development was
not strange but was now becoming rampant. Continue reading after the cut..
Another victim who
withdrew some amount of money from an ATM in Ibadan was stunned when he
was told by a cashier in his office, in an attempt to make some deposit,
that two of the one thousand naira notes were fake.
A head of corporate affairs in one of the
banks ruled out the handiwork of people he
described as ‘bad elements’ in the system. According to him,
there is need for the banks to take extra vigilance on those uploading
money into the ATMs and double-check bundle of currency notes being put
in the vaults by the Tellers.
A financial analyst and Chief
Operating Officer, Twinsronk Consulting, Okechukwu Amadi, said ATM has
revolutionised banking in Nigeria, calling on the industry regulator,
Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to take bold step to stop the disturbing
trend.
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