The
Central Bank of Nigeria has directed Deposit Money Banks to henceforth
destroy Automated Teller Machine cards trapped in their ATM terminals.
The CBN also gave banks 24 hours to reverse debit entries arising from failed transaction attributable to system-related issues.
The directives were contained in a
14-page ‘Guidelines for card issuance and usage in Nigeria’ released by
the Banking and Payment System Department of the CBN on Tuesday.
The CBN guidelines read, “Any trapped
card in the ATM shall be rendered unusable (by perforation) by the
acquirer and returned to the issuer on the next working day.
“All debit entries arising from failed
transactions attributable to system-related issues must be
auto-reversed. Where auto reversal is not feasible, manual reversal must
be carried out within 24 hours.”
“The security of the payment card shall
be the responsibility of the issuer and the losses incurred on account
of breach of security or failure of the security mechanism shall be
borne by the issuer, except the issuer establishes security breach on
the part of the card holder.”
Consequently, banks are to ensure ATM cards are issued from card schemes that have demonstrable fraud management systems.
Specifically, the CBN guidelines said
banks were to ensure they deploy “robust fraud monitoring tools that
have the capacity to monitor customer transaction trends, real -time
operations and option of blocking suspicious transactions.”
The guidelines further read, “Liability
shift rules shall apply when Nigerian issued EMV cards are used
fraudulently on EMV compatible terminals where magnetic stripe fallback
is enabled, or at non-EMV compatible terminals where the transactions is
read as a fully magnetic stripe transaction.
“Card issuers are required to monitor
their card production procedures to ensure that their EMV cards are
properly produced. The issuer shall take full liability for any fraud
from a fall back transaction that occurred as a result of improperly
produced chip card.”
The central bank said the new guidelines
were introduced to enable financial institutions and card processors to
upgrade their card operations to ensure optimum security and customer
friendliness, among others.
In the application of customer fees for
services rendered, banks were to be guided in their operations by the
CBN’s ‘Guide to bank charges’.
“Card issuers are expected to
continuously educate cardholders on the following, among other things:
security tips for safeguarding cardholder information; costs and charges
associated with owning and using a payment card; contact numbers to the
card issuer’s 24/7 contact centre in order to report cardholder issues
or problems; dispute resolution process across the bank’s products and
channels,” the CBN said.
PUNCH
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