@DStvNg i renewed subscription for IUC Number 8216525900 since morning but it's still inactive. All your phone lines are unavailable. Please could you look into this.
Thanks
@DStvNg i have been trying to reach your customer service line all day, but it's not going through. I renewed subscription for this iuc number 8216525900 since morning, and it's still inactive. Please could you look into it?
Thanks
Opening a @Sterling_Bankng Bank account is a statement of values. A protest against exploitation. And a demand for transparency, innovation, and fairness in Nigerian banking.
Let’s make Friday #OpenSterlingAcct Day.
Let your money stand for fairness, transparency, and innovation
If regulators won’t act, we must act with our wallets.
@Sterling_Bankng has shown us a better way. They’ve proven that you can run a profitable, tech-driven, modern bank without extracting rent from the people.
So yes, I’m acting.
These aren’t make-or-break figures for any of them.
They’re just comfortable profits from charging ordinary Nigerians ₦10 to ₦50 per transfer—millions of times over.
The truth?
They won’t stop unless we make them.
If banks won’t change, we must change banks.
Removing transfer fees would hardly dent their revenues:
Here’s what the numbers say:
GTCO: ₦15.47 billion from transfer charges — just 1.22% of revenue
UBA: ₦48.36 billion — 1.52%
Zenith Bank: ₦80.05 billion — 2.02%
First Bank: ₦42.55 billion — 1.41%
the combined federal allocation to six federal universities - UNN, ABU, UI, OAU, Unical, and Unilag in 2025 budget and more about 60% of the budget of the 2025 Yobe State (₦320 billion)
Meanwhile, all four banks are posting record profits.
Now, consider this: four banks took ₦186 billion (Zenith, GTCO, UBA, and First Bank) from the pockets of Nigerians in transfer fees alone in 2024.
For context 186 billion is more than the combined federal allocation to six federal universities - UNN, ABU, UI, OAU, Unical, and
They walked away from ₦13.56 billion in transfer charges—4.13% of their total revenue—to give Nigerians breathing room.
Let that sink in:
They gave up over ₦13 billion from transfers alone.
Other banks could, too—but they won’t.
In 2020 and 2023, I called on the CBN and President Tinubu to ease the burden on Nigerians by stopping the hidden, exploitative charges Nigerians face in the banking system. They didn’t act.
But Sterling Bank did.
A thread
Sterling Bank Did the Math—and Still Chose the People.
.....They Ditched Transfer Fees.
On Friday Morning, I will open an account at a Sterling Bank Branch in Abuja to reward the bank for removing transfer charges, which other banks have refused to do.
@gbemilekeo_ These stuffs were not as expensive as y'all make it look. Mr Biggs meat pie or sausage was part of my snack to school everyday and the reason I left boarding school in SS1. I even took my girl friend to Mr Biggs on a date.
@Wakanowdotcom@WakanowResolve@flyunitedng it's obvious you've started scamming Nigerians with your bookings and flight schedule. If not why would you cancel a flight and not make a refund after three months. @thatverydarkman abeg we need your help here ooo.