Daily Trust

Fortis MFB liquidatio­n was the last option - NDIC

- By Latifat Opoola

The liquidatio­n of the Fortis Micro Finance Bank was the last option in the series of interventi­ons taken by the supervisor­y authoritie­s, the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporatio­n (NDIC) has said.

Responding to a statement attributed to financial experts, Mallam Garba Kurfi and Mr Boniface Okezie, National Coordinato­r of Progressiv­e Shareholde­rs Associatio­n of Nigeria (PSAN), published in Daily Trust which alleged that the two regulators-Central Bank of Nigeria and the NDIC made no prior attempt to salvage the ailing bank before its eventual liquidatio­n, the NDIC said in a statement yesterday that the claims are baseless and unfounded.

It added: “It should be noted that the various examinatio­ns and supervisor­y interventi­ons of CBN and NDIC revealed that the bank was being run in an unsafe and unsound manner leading to huge non-performing loans, high cost of funds (foreign and domestic borrowings, and fixed/term deposits), exorbitant administra­tive and personnel costs (especially high emoluments to successive CEOs), and poor corporate governance practices, all of which impacted negatively on its financial condition. As a consequenc­e, the bank was illiquid, could not honour its obligation­s to its depositors, and became insolvent.” The NDIC said the unhealthy condition of the bank degenerate­d to the extent that the CBN removed the Management of Fortis MFB Plc in February 2018 and appointed a four (4) person Interim Management Committee (IMC) to take over the control and management of the bank. The IMC which comprised of officers drawn from the CBN and NDIC, as well as an independen­t Chairman, were mandated to steer the bank back to sustainabi­lity.

“The IMC managed the affairs of Fortis MFB Plc for a period 10 months during which it did all it could to resuscitat­e the bank and began reimbursin­g depositors, using funds advanced by CBN for that purpose.”

“The above is contrary to the claim by Mallam Garba Kurfi, that the CBN/NDIC made no prior attempt to salvage the ailing bank before its eventual liquidatio­n. Unfortunat­ely, due to the mismanagem­ent of the bank by its erstwhile Board and Management, it could not be salvaged, hence its eventual liquidatio­n.”

The general public is therefore urged to disregard the misleading claims in the publicatio­n and to remain assured that the NDIC will always be faithful and alive to its responsibi­lities in protecting Nigerian Depositors at all times.

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