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Heritage Bank in Distress, May Be Cover Up By CBN

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Heritage Bank Plc is currently stuck in a debilitating liquidity situation; SaharaReporters has learned. Our sources disclosed on Monday that the bank is unable to meet customers’ immediate withdrawal requests and has wiped out all foreign currency domiciliary accounts through physical theft of cash by the bank's directors.
First Bank Plc, which handles Heritage Bank's universal clearing activities, has threatened to blacklist the bank and stop further clearing transactions if its outstanding deficit of over N5billion is not cleared.

At the weekend, at a meeting held at a secret location between the Managing Director and some top management staff, it was resolved that the Managing Director and two Executive Directors should resign their appointment for their role in throwing the institution into distress.

Sources said the bank's operations in the Northern part of the country region are sustained by one customer, Rano Oil Limited, which maintains a deposit with Heritage Bank because its Chairman is unaware of the severity of the situation in the bank has slipped into.

Among others, the Managing Director is alleged to have been involved in the laundering of about N12.8billion.  Two insurance firms: IEI Insurance Plc, and the National Insurance Commission of Nigeria, are said to be connected to the matter.

 SaharaReporters gathered that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) was prepared to charge the Managing Director to court, but did not, following the intervention of Senate President Bukola Saraki, who is a part-owner of the bank.  The EFCC, whose chairman is awaiting confirmation by the Senate, stepped back.

Customers with foreign currency deposits are facing severe difficulties because they no longer have access to those funds.

Because of the magnitude of the bank's problems and the possibility of prosecution, the Managing Director is said to have taken ill.

Out of about 500 Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) of the bank in the Lagos metropolis, only 138 are currently dispensing cash, the bank lacking money to feed the others.

 Bank sources said a sum of N140million is required to supply all the ATM locations, and Heritage struggles to provide N10million for these ATM locations, which is why its machines rarely dispense cash.

The bank's situation is further worsened by boardroom intrigues, tribal politics and ownership tussle.

The Managing Director and one Executive Director are said to run the bank like sole proprietors.  The Managing Director and another Executive Director, Mary Akpobomen, who has been promised the position of the Deputy Managing Director by December, are in the same camp.  The Yoruba interest in the bank, with Board Chairman, Mr. Seyi Akinfenwa, also has Mr. Tayo Ayeni and two Executive Directors, Mr. Niyi Adeseun and Mr. Ola Olabimjo on another side. On yet another side are Mr. Godwin Emefiele, Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), who is the main pusher of Delta State/Agbor interest.  The battle axes are said to be two other Executive Directors, Mrs. Ada Eze and Mr. Jude.

The three-dimensional feuds have ensured that positions, postings or deployments are made on lines of group loyalty, with competence plainly ignored. The bank's Treasurer, Mr. Abidemi Shonaiki, was eased out of the bank when the Managing Director was on leave.

ᐧ Insiders revealed that the bank has been turned into a compost heap by its top management staff, who among other misdeeds, use customers' naira deposits to finance the acquisition of private properties in Lagos, Abuja, and Port Harcourt.  They are also said to award contracts at inflated costs to the Managing Director, relatives, and friends of executive directors; employ top management staff without clearance from the CBN; bribe CBN staff on banking inspection with dollars; and cover up the bank's liquidity problems by buying cash from other banks without the required documents or due diligence.

The Heritage Bank management portfolio of misdeeds is also said to include paying N100million bribe to pension funds officials for patronage retention; illegal warehousing of N1.2billion that should be in the Treasury Savings Account; as well as illegal clearance of customers' deposits via issuance and payments of questionable ‘PRs’ in hundreds of millions.

The CBN Governor has ensured that these misdemeanors are kept hidden due to political pressure by the owners of the bank, and because the CBN doesn't want to give the appearance of further distress in the banking sector following the recent crisis at Skye Bank.

The bank's ailments have also manifested in the practice of debiting customers' accounts for transfers without crediting the beneficiaries for days, blaming it on network failure; arbitrary sacking of staff who insist on standards; sacking of staff who exposed the fraud involving the Nigeria Ports Authority through which N7billion was illegally warehoused and diverted in clear violation of TSA directives; and refusal to report fraudulent activities involving relatives and cronies of the Managing and Executive Directors.

Other symptoms of poor corporate governance include the transfer to Abuja, but not sanction, of an Executive Director and General Manager from Lagos for committing fraud; promoting Managing Director’s relatives without appraisal; fraudulent conversion of bank properties by the Managing Director and top management staff; and the procurement of N2billion worth of furniture items and N3billion Toyota cars without passing through tender procedure.

Also, the bank awarded all cleaning contracts to one Mrs. Akpobome, who used different names for contracts, which cover North, South, West, East and Abuja outlets of the bank. The Managing Director and other top management staff also award contracts to their wives and children without due diligence.  
  
The bank, the sources added, employed school certificate holders as officers, assistant managers, deputy managers or managers, even without experience.


The National Medical Association (NMA) in Niger says the ratio of doctors to patients in the state was one to 9,000, as against one to 600 as recommended by the World Health Organaisation(WHO). Dr. Mustapha Yahaya, NMA Chairman in‎ the state, made the disclosure on Monday in Minna, when members of the association paid a courtesy call on the House of Assembly Committee on Health. “We have always drawn the attention of the government to the fact that doctors are inadequate‎ in Niger. “We have always made reference to WHO, which recommends one doctor to 600 people. Here, it is one doctor to 9,000 people” he explained. According to him, there are currently 450 doctors in the state, with many of them already leaving “due to poor remuneration”.

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/11/1-doctor-9000-people-niger-nma-laments/
The National Medical Association (NMA) in Niger says the ratio of doctors to patients in the state was one to 9,000, as against one to 600 as recommended by the World Health Organaisation(WHO). Dr. Mustapha Yahaya, NMA Chairman in‎ the state, made the disclosure on Monday in Minna, when members of the association paid a courtesy call on the House of Assembly Committee on Health. “We have always drawn the attention of the government to the fact that doctors are inadequate‎ in Niger. “We have always made reference to WHO, which recommends one doctor to 600 people. Here, it is one doctor to 9,000 people” he explained. According to him, there are currently 450 doctors in the state, with many of them already leaving “due to poor remuneration”.

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/11/1-doctor-9000-people-niger-nma-laments/

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