JUST IN: NDIC Completes Payment of N5 Million Each to Majority of Heritage Bank Customers

The Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) has announced that it has successfully disbursed N5 million each to 82.36% of the depositors of the now-defunct Heritage Bank.

This development comes after the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) revoked Heritage Bank’s banking license on June 3, 2024, due to severe financial instability and regulatory violations.

In a statement issued on Sunday, Bashir Nuhu, the NDIC Director of Communication and Public Affairs, detailed the progress made since the closure of the bank.

According to the statement, the NDIC began paying out the insured deposits just four days after the bank’s liquidation. This rapid response was made possible by using Bank Verification Numbers (BVNs) to quickly locate depositors’ accounts across other banks.

The statement read in part, “In the discharge of its deposit guarantee mandate, the Corporation began the payment of the insured deposits of N5m maximum per depositor within a record time of four days of the bank closure.

“This was achieved using Bank Verification Numbers as a unique identifier to locate depositors’ alternate accounts in other banks.

“This unprecedented achievement of direct payment through BVN-linked alternate accounts without the need for depositors to visit NDIC offices or fill out forms marks a historic shift for the NDIC in the prompt reimbursement of depositors with payment of about 82.36 per cent of the total insured deposit to date.”

For depositors with more than N5m, the director explained that the remaining balances (classified as uninsured deposits) would be paid as liquidation dividends upon realization of the defunct bank’s assets and recovery of debts owed to the defunct bank.

“It is instructive to state that, the remaining 17.64 per cent of the insured deposits yet to be paid were largely depositors whose accounts have post no debits instructions or have no BVN. Others are those with no alternative accounts in other banks or accounts with a KYC limit on the maximum lodgment per day and are yet to come forward for verification.

“However, depositors with balances exceeding Five Million Naira have been paid the initial insured sum of Five Million Naira, while the remaining balances (classified as uninsured deposits) will be paid as liquidation dividends upon realization of the defunct bank’s assets and recovery of debts owed to the defunct bank,” the statement added.

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