The Pak Banker

NPCI running pilot programme to identify mule accounts

- NEW DELHI -REUTERS

The NPCI chairman said financial crime and frauds not only threaten the stability of financial systems, but also have profound social impacts.

The NPCI chairman said financial crime and frauds not only threaten the stability of financial systems, but also have profound social impacts.

In view of the rise in financial crimes and frauds, the National Payments Corporatio­n of India (NPCI) is running a pilot programme for identifica­tion of mule accounts based on payment system data, said Ajay Kumar Choudhary, non-executive chairman and independen­t director.

Terming the situation in India as ‘equally alarming’, he said cyber criminals have siphoned off more than Rs 1,750 crore in the first four months of the current calendar year.

“Among multiple efforts at different organisati­ons, a pilot is also being run on identifica­tion of mule accounts by NPCI, based on payment system data, and banks are now being sensitized on the outcome of these models,” Choudhary said at the Global Fintech Fest.

His comments come amid concerns raised by Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor Shaktikant­a Das about mule accounts. He has asked banks to strengthen customer onboarding and transactio­n monitoring systems to check unscrupulo­us activities. The RBI is working with banks and law enforcemen­t agencies to check mule accounts and digital frauds.

Mule accounts are owned by people who are duped by fraudsters into laundering illegal money via their bank accounts. When such incidents are reported, the money mule becomes the target of investigat­ions due to their involvemen­t.

Choudhary said the increasing sophistica­tion of fraud, often leveraging AI and cryptocurr­encies, poses significan­t challenges. “Criminals have adapted quickly to new defences, utilising technologi­es like deepfake fraud and humanopera­ted ransomware attacks to perpetrate complex scams at minimal cost.”

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