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UBA, Sterling Bank, Jaiz Bank Plc, Others Top List Of Financial Institutions To Be Disconnected From USSD Services

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Sterling Bank, Jaiz Bank, and a host of others deposit money banks (DMB), will cease to enjoy services linked to the Unstructured Supplementary Service Data (USSD) codes.

This is as the Nigeri­an Communications Commission (NCC), has issued a directive to telecommunications companies to disconnect any financial institution yet to settle their outstanding ob­ligations associates to the code by January 27, 2025.

In a public notice yesterday, signed by the Commission’s Director of Public Affairs, Reuben Muoka, the NCC said affected banks must settle their outstanding ob­ligations by January 27, 2025, or risk losing access to their USSD codes.

The implication for account owners in the affected banks is that they may not be able to re­ceive alerts and perform banking trans­actions using their mobile phones.

In extension, the codes, essential for en­abling mobile banking services, could be reassigned to other ap­plicants if the debts remain un­resolved.

Originally designed by tele­com operators for services like airtime purchases and subscrip­tions, USSD has become a key tool in the banking sector, offering fi­nancial services to users without requiring an Internet connection.

As at Tuesday, January 14, 2025, close of business, the commission revealed that nine out of 18 financial institutions had not complied with regulato­ry directives.

While other banks have cleared their debts, the total amount initially owed by the fi­nancial institutions was reported to exceed N200 billion.

However, the regulator did not disclose the precise debt currently owed by the affected banks.

According to the NCC, some of the unpaid invoices have remained unpaid since 2020, in­dicating a prolonged financial dispute between the banks and telecom operators.

Part of the notice reads, “By the information made available to the commission as at close of business on Tuesday, January 14, 2025, of a total of 18 financial institutions, the nine institutions listed below have failed to comply significantly with the directives in the second joint circular of the Central Bank of Nigeria and the commission dated December 20, 2024, for the settlement of out­standing invoices due to MNOS, some since 2020.”

The regulator noted that banks’ failure to comply with the CBN-NCC joint circular also means that they are unable to meet the good standing require­ments for the renewal of the USSD codes assigned to them by the commission.

It added, “In fulfillment of its consumer protection mandate, the commission wishes to in­form consumers that they may be unable to access the USSD platform of the affected finan­cial institutions from January 27, 2025.”

The affected financial institu­tions include United Bank for Africa Plc, Fidelity Bank Plc, First City Monument Bank, Jaiz Bank Plc, Polaris Bank Limited, Sterling Bank Limited, Wema Bank Plc, and other two financial institutions.

The affected USSD codes in­clude 770, 919, 822, 329, 773, 833, 7799, 945 and 966.

The NCC emphasized that the financial institutions had been duly notified of the need for im­mediate compliance and warned that consumers may face service disruptions if the issues remain unresolved.

This development highlighted ongoing tensions between tele­communications companies and financial institutions over unpaid USSD-related debts, a challenge that has persisted for years.

Earlier in the week, NCC had promised to issue a notice with the names of the erring banks, preparing bank customers to seek alternatives during the sus­pension period.

USSD is a crucial payment gateway for many Nigerians. During the 20th anniversary of the telecoms sector in 2021, the then Group Managing Di­rector of Zenith Bank Plc, Mr. Ebenezer Onyeagwu, said, “The introduction of USSD changed everything. Without telecoms infrastructure, there is no USSD code.”

The value of USSD transac­tions between January and June 2024 was N2.19 trillion.

However, this is a 54.75 percent decline from N4.84 trillion in the same period of 2023, with more Nigerians increasingly favouring internet transfers.

In a December 20 memo, the CBN and NCC gave banks a De­cember 31, 2024, deadline to pay 85 percent of all outstanding invoices (from February 2022)- a mandate that has been ignored by many of the banks.

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