The Bangladesh Bank on Tuesday unveiled a guideline for merchant acquiring, making it mandatory for payment services providers to carry out rigorous scrutiny before onboarding sellers to eliminate online frauds and financial crimes.
According to the “Guidelines for Merchant Acquiring and Escrow Services 2023”, merchant-acquiring institutions such as banks, mobile financial services, payments service providers (PSPs), and payments system operators have been asked to draw up their respective onboarding policies.
The policies will give details about the documents to be needed for merchant onboarding, document verification process, risk analysis, risk management, escrow services, refund, merchant activity inspection and monitoring, and directives for merchants in providing services to customers.
It will also include the instructions to be followed by both parties for the settlement of transactional disputes.
The move from the central bank comes as Ponzi-like e-commerce platforms lured unsuspecting customers to make payments of thousands of crores of taka on the back of hefty discounts during the coronavirus pandemic.
Last year, the central bank identified 25 online sellers, including Evaly, E-orange, Qcoom, Dhamaka, Aladinerprodip, Sirajganj Shop, Alesha Mart, and Dalal Plus that received a staggering Tk 6,050 crore in just four months from clients through payment gateways and banks.
Most of the customers who were defrauded haven't received their products or refunds yet.
Since operations and transactions of merchants such as e-commerce platforms or online businesses carry the risk of money laundering and fraudulent activities, the BB guideline asked acquirers to receive a host of documents from sellers.
They include the merchant's name, permanent and current address, a copy of the national identification card, the electronic know your customer, personal retail account, digital business identification number, current trade licence, and the certificate of incorporation.
Their telephone or mobile number, bank, MFS or PSP account numbers, business address, website and email address, description, legality, social importance of the businesses in which merchants operate, the updated list of products, permission for the sale of goods or services, and documents of the association where the merchant is a member have to be submitted.
Acquirers have been asked to conduct regular risk analysis for their merchants in a bid to tackle fraud, money laundering, and terrorist financing and safeguard customer's interests.