System glitch makes customers withdraw $40m in free money from Ethiopian bank
Ethiopia's biggest commercial bank is scrambling to recoup large sums of money withdrawn by customers after a "systems glitch".
The customers
discovered early on Saturday that they could take out more cash than they had
in their accounts at the Commercial Bank of Ethiopia (CBE).
More than $40m (£31m) was withdrawn or transferred to other banks, local media reported. It took several hours for the institution to freeze transactions.
Much of the money was withdrawn from state-owned CBE by students, bank president Abe Sano told journalists on Monday.News of the glitch
spread across universities largely via messaging apps and phone calls.
Long lines formed at
campus ATMs, with a student in western Ethiopia withdrawing money until police
officers arrived on campus to stop them.
The student, who
attends Jimma University Institute of Technology, said he "did not believe
it was true" when his friends told him at around 01:00 local time (22:00
GMT) that it was possible to withdraw large amounts from ATMs, or transfer the money
using the bank's app.
Another student, at
Dilla University in southern Ethiopia, said a number of his peers retrieved
money from CBE between midnight and 02:00 local time.
More
than 38 million people hold accounts at CBE, which was established 82 years ago.
Ethiopia's central
bank, which serves as the financial sector's governing body, released a
statement on Sunday saying "a glitch" had occurred during
"maintenance and inspection activities".
The statement, however,
focused on the interrupted service that occurred after CBE froze all
transactions. It did not mention the money withdrawn by customers.
Sano did not say
exactly how much money was withdrawn during Saturday's incident, but said the
loss incurred was small when compared to the bank's total assets.
He stated that CBE was
not hit by a cyber-attack and that customers should not be worried as their
personal accounts were intact.
At
least three universities have released statements advising students to return
any money not belonging to them that they may have taken from CBE.
Anyone returning money
will not be charged with a criminal offence, Sano said.
But it's not clear how
successful the bank's attempts to recoup their money has been so far.
The student from Jimma
University said on Monday he had not heard of anyone giving the money back, but
said he had seen police vehicles on campus.
An official at Dilla
University said bank employees were on campus collecting money that some
students were returning voluntarily.

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