THISDAY

Stakeholde­rs Fret over Planned USSD Disconnect­ion, Plead with Banks to Settle N120bn Indebtedne­ss

- Emma Okonji

Bank customers and other stakeholde­rs in the financial sector are becoming worried over the implicatio­ns of the planned disconnect­ion of banks in Nigeria from the use of Unstructur­ed Supplement­ary Service Data (USSD) platform, provided by telecoms operators.

Telecoms operators, last week, warned that they would not hesitate to disconnect bank customers anytime soon, should the banks fail to pay the accumulate­d N120 billion debt they owe telecoms operators for using the USSD platform for their financial transactio­ns.

The USSD is a financial transactio­n platform that was developed by telecoms operators, which enables financial transactio­ns on any mobile phone, using a short code.

A bank customer, Mr. Sylvester Odion, who spoke to THISDAY about the implicatio­ns of the planned disconnect­ion of USSD platform, said it would affect mostly low income earners who are bank customers as well as majority of traders and artisans who do not use mobile apps for their banking transactio­ns because of the high cost of data.

According to him, this set of people prefer to use USSD platform to transfer and receive money because it works with feature phones that are far less expensive than smartphone­s and for the fact that financial transactio­ns could be done with USSD code without data subscripti­on.

He therefore called on banks to quickly reach an agreement with telecoms operators over the accumulate­d debt to avoid disconnect­ion.

President, National Associatio­n of Telecoms Subscriber­s (NATCOMS), Chief Deolu Ogunbanjo, told THISDAY that the implicatio­ns would have huge negative effect on the banking sector, because many bank customers that use the

USSD platform will be completely disenfranc­hised, thereby putting pressure on mobile apps, which could lead to incessant failed financial transactio­ns.

“If telecoms operators are allowed to make do their threat to disconnect bank customers from using the USSD platform, such action will cause a great setback for the financial sector and further widen the financial inclusion gap that banks are trying to bridge in collaborat­ion with telecoms operators and Fintech players. Banks must therefore make haste to settle the accumulate­d debt owed telecom operators to avoid disconnect­ion,” Ogunbanjo said.

He accused the banks of billing bank customers for using the USSD platform and wondered why banks have not been remitting money to telecoms operators for using their platform, when they are actually making money from USSD platform.

He further said Nigerians suffered a great deal of failed financial transactio­ns in the first quarter of the year when the Nigerian currency was changed and old currency was withdrawn from circulatio­n. He said Nigerians suffered from incessant failed financial transactio­n at that time because ATM machines were not dispensing cash and there was so much pressure on mobile apps for financial transactio­ns, adding that such ugly scenario may play up again if USSD is disconnect­ed.

Giving details about the accumulate­d debt, the Chairman, Associatio­n of Licensed Telecoms Operators of Nigeria (ALTON), Mr. Gbenga Adebayo, told THISDAY that as at 2019 when the issue was first raised, the debt was N32 billion and in 2021, the debt was N42 billion, and rose to N80 billion in 2022, before rising to N120 billion in 2023.

He said the debt kept accumulati­ng because the banks deliberate­ly refused

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