N555M FINE: FIDELITY DISPUTES DATA BREACH ALLEGATION CLAIMS BY NDPC
Fidelity Bank has denied data breach claims made by the Nigerian Data Protection Commission (NDPC).
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In a statement issued on Wednesday, a bank spokeswoman, Meksley Nwagboh, stated that no data legislation was breached to warrant the commission’s imposition of a N555.8 million fine.
The NDPC charged that the bank infringed on some customers’ data and fined the financial institution.
The commission claimed Fidelity Bank violated the Nigeria Data Protection Regulation (NDPR) of 2019 and the Nigeria Data Protection (NDP) Act of 2023.
The panel also faulted the bank’s lack of cooperation during an investigation before imposing the punishment.
However, the bank said it conducted itself to the highest ethical standards by ensuring full compliance with extant laws on data protection.
āAs a Bank, we remain in discussions with the NDPC over an amicable resolution to this matter,ā Nwagboh said in a statement.
Fidelity Bank gave a breakdown of its dealings with the NDPC on the matter thus:
āOn April 30th, 2023, we received a notice of investigation from the Nigerian Data Protection Agency (NDPA), now the Nigerian Data Protection Commission (NDPC). The investigation was in respect of a complaint from [name has been withheld to protect the identity of the complainant] who claimed that [name withheld] details were used to open an account in the bank without [name withheld] consent.
āBased on this notice, we conducted an internal investigation into the circumstances around the claim and discovered as follows:
o An account opening request was received online in the name of [name withheld], and an email was sent to the email address attached to the request informing them about this.
āIn compliance with our Data Protection policy, accounts created online without full documentation are not allowed to be operational and are closed after 30 days if the outstanding documents are not provided to authenticate the identity of the person seeking to open the account.
āIn compliance with our data protection laws, the account was not allowed to be operational as the passport photograph and BVN were not provided.
āThe account was immediately placed on āPost No Debitā status as the applicant was expected to complete the account opening process by providing the outstanding documents for verification within 30 days. This was not done, and the account was eventually closed.
āOn May 2nd 2023, we responded to the NDPC that the bank did not violate any law because there was no data breach and that the account opening process was not completed. On our part, we carried out due diligence by immediately blocking the account and subsequently closing the account when we did not receive the outstanding documents.
āAt no point in the process was the account ever operational.
āOn July 7th, 2023, we were invited for a Pre-Action meeting with NDPC. During the meeting, we restated our position as earlier communicated to them in our letter dated May 2nd.
āHowever, despite our explanation and evidence provided to support our claim, the agency informed us that they had reached a conclusion to impose a penalty on the bank.
āOn 5th December of 2023, we got a letter from NDPC demanding we pay a āremedial feeā of N250 million within 21 days.
āWe immediately commenced another round of engagements with the Commission as we were convinced, we had not breached any extant law or regulation.
āWhile discussions were still ongoing with the NDPC, we received another letter on the 20th of August demanding that we now pay N555.8m naira.ā