A
Nairaland user, Tokotaya, has warned Nigerians, who make use of dormant bank
accounts not to throw caution to the wind as the account might generate debt.
Recounting his ordeal with one of
Nigeria’s leading bank, he said his dormant bank account generated a debt which
kept growing overtime.
Here is an excerpt of his detailed
experience and warning below:
‘If
you have a dormant bank account in Nigeria, you could be on CBN’s debtors’
list. Let me recast that, if you have a dormant account in Ecobank, you may
already be a debtor, without knowing it.
Your
name may have been listed as having bad credit on the Credit Risk Management
Bureau (CRMB)’s database with CBN. It’s not a demarketing attempt. It is purely
my experience that others can learn from.
I
had a current account in Ecobank around 2011. My ex-employer moved our salaries
there based on a nice presentation made by the Branch Manager of the Bank at
the time. However, the promises made were not met, so the salary account was
moved elsewhere and we all thought it ended there.
More
than three years later, I had left the company and was processing a loan with
another bank. Near the completion of the deal, they called to tell me I was
owing Ecobank. I was advised to sort it out with them before any progress could
be made. I didn’t take any loan. The account didn’t have an overdraft facility.
It was a basic current account from which you could never withdraw above your
available balance at any point in time. How could I owe on the account?
I
called their customer care and the lady insisted I must have taken a loan. I
insisted I did not, and tried to convince her to look into the account to see
what could have happened. She rudely cut the call!
I
made a series of other calls and was linked to their Oke Afa, Isolo Branch
where the account resided and was able to establish that it was my dormant
account there that ran into negative. Ecobank made some routine charges on the
account and when they depleted what was there, they made negative deduction of
N119 and the negative started accumulating interest that had amounted to about
N2,500 by late last year when I applied for a loan.
What
manner of a bank would make deductions from a dormant account? I went to the
bank and confronted them. An official explained that an account going dormant
does not mean that charges could not be made on it. He said a man can be
sleeping, but his bodily functions work nonetheless.
I
paid off the money and obtained a letter of Non-indebtedness and took it to my
new bank before they could process my loan. The great worry: what if I had not
applied for a loan at another bank? How would I have known? Many decades later,
may be as a pensioner, one may now apply for something and they will tell you
there’s a debt of a couple of millions of naira you need to clear.
I’ve
commenced the process of closing the account with Ecobank. Other dormant
accounts I have are going too, even though some of the other banks are arguing
that their own processes are different from Ecobank’s. They argue that
typically, your dormant account holds the last balance there till you
reactivate it. One said if at all any customer’s account goes into red, his
bank had a standard procedure to call up the customer by phone to alert him. No
one called me from Ecobank.
How
much was N119 that Ecobank would go ahead to list me as having a non-performing
loan instead of calling me to clear it. The totality of my experience with
Ecobank has been horrible to say the least. To even collect the Letter of
Non-Indebtedness was a war. It took nearly 3 weeks of constant harassment to
get it ready and on the day I was to pick it up, I spent three and a half hours
in their banking hall. So folks, check up on all your current dormant accounts,
especially those with Ecobank.

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