Fraudsters are quietly robbing banks and other financial
institutions of a billion shillings annually, a survey on financial
crimes has revealed.
A report by Deloitte Kenya shows
that most of the millions are lost through cash theft, cheque fraud and
the misappropriation of assets.
Naturally, banks are
the biggest victims, with insurance companies coming a close second. The
two are favourite targets with fraudsters because they handle and keep
piles of money that strain their internal controls.
Corporate
bank accounts are especially vulnerable because they frequently move a
lot of money, making the tracking of any suspicious transactions more
difficult compared to monitoring personal accounts.
Robert
Nyamu, the director of Forensic and Litigation Support at Deloitte,
says the amounts being siphoned from unsuspecting corporations could be
more than Sh1 billion because most banks and financial institutions are
reluctant to disclose such thefts.
SIPHON MONEY
“There
are lots of reputation issues tied to disclosing whether or not your
institution has fallen prey to fraudsters. Many banks understandably
don’t want to create fear in the customers. But the fraud is there,” he
told the Nation.
Most of the fraud, he adds, is carried out by junior employees and rarely the top or mid-level management.
“Most
banks in Kenya have poor internal controls to monitor the activities of
their own employees. So, when an employee begins checking some accounts
that they have no business accessing, no one questions them because no
one even notices,” he adds.
According to Mr Nyamu, the
most likely people to siphon money from bank accounts are the employees
with an IT or accounting background.
Many companies
have weak security controls and some do not have a platform for sharing
information concerning incidents, trends and the extent of financial
crimes, which makes it possible for crooks to go undetected in a given
industry, he adds.
“We are aware of cases where a
person who was fired from one bank after he was suspected of fraud, was
hired in another simply because the rival bank did not want to disclose
its vulnerability,” recalls Mr Nyamu.
Insurance
companies and telecommunication companies have also been the most
targeted although they have recently invested in securing their systems.
“Mobile
money services were the hottest target in the past few years but this
is no longer the case as systems have been upgraded and loopholes
sealed,” he says.
Collusion between outsiders and
insiders in the targeted financial institutions was the most preferred
way of theft, the report showed.
Mr Nyamu explains that
it is virtually impossible for someone to defraud a financial
institution from outside, which is why internal whistle blowers are a
must whenever a colleague exhibits suspicious behaviour.
“Many of these culprits are insiders, or they had someone on the inside working with them,” he says.
Mr
Nyamu advises investors and savers to educate themselves on the various
ways of checking whether a company is compromised or not.
“First,
you should check whether the industry you are ploughing your money into
is regulated. A lot of people lost money a few years ago in pyramid
schemes that were not regulated by the government. Today, people
continue to lose money from loan sharks,” says Mr Nyamu.
Clients
should also regularly monitor the financial health of the institutions
they are dealing with by monitoring financial trends and attending
shareholders meetings.
“Bank customers should insist on being alerted whenever there is any activity in their accounts,” he adds.
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