Following reports of customer complaints over faulty Visa card
transactions at ATMs from Co-operative Bank, Visa Inc told The Myanmar
Times that the blame lay not with Visa or CB but instead with the
cardholders and issuing banks.
“Most of the issues with
transaction declines were done by the issuing banks for reasons such as
‘insufficient funds,’ ‘incorrect PIN’ or simply ‘do not honour’,” Erin
Steinhauer, Visa’s head of corporate relations for Southeast Asia, said
on January 4.
“We conclude that the declines were of no faults of the acquiring bank [CB], the ATM machines or VisaNet.”
On December 27, the managing director of CB, U Pe Myint, told The Myanmar Times that CB had been slammed with customer complaints over faulty withdrawals from Visa customers, as “cardholders cannot get their money due to limitations on the machines”.
He
added that CB “explained the consequences” of the difficulties they
were experiencing with Visa transactions, and had set up a hotline for
customer care. “We’ve contacted Visa to make repairs,” he said on
December 27.
However, Visa denied hearing of any problems from
CB. “We haven’t seen any complaints from CB in the past or complaints
from customers, so that was really surprising to us,” Ms Steinhauer
said.
Visa found in their investigation of CB’s transaction
information on January 4 that all failed transactions since the go-live
date of December 12 were “due to card issuer rejection” and that “Visa
wouldn’t have a role in card issuer rejection”, Ms Steinhauer said.
Ms
Steinhauer explained that card issuer rejections are when the card’s
issuing bank rejects the transaction. Visa does not know which banks are
responsible for the declines and “they could be from anywhere”, she
said.
Visa would not give The Myanmar Times the data on the
frequency of declined transactions following their investigation of CB’s
transaction information.
When The Myanmar Times contacted CB
after Visa’s investigation, U Pe Myint said the bank’s ATMs were still
experiencing technical difficulties with Visa transactions.
“Sometimes [a cardholder] cannot withdraw money,” he said on January 4.
“Sometimes they forgot their PIN number, sometimes it’s IT problems.”
To
manage cross border ATM processing, Visa partnered with Planet Payment
to connect their domestic ATMs to VisaNet. On December 26, Philip Beck,
chairman and chief executive officer of Planet Payment, told Thai
newspaper The Nation that Visa’s processing system enables payments to meet the needs of particular markets.
But
despite Visa’s partnership with Planet Payment, CB’s “network goes
down, the machines do not work properly and then [the cardholder] cannot
withdraw money from the ATMs”, U Pe Myint said on January 4.
“Sometimes the network goes down for three minutes at a time,” he added.
Visa
began pilot tests with ATMs in Myanmar three weeks ago. Kanbawza Bank,
Visa’s second domestic partner, has not reported any problems with ATM
transactions to either The Myanmar Times or to Visa.
On December 4, a journalist writing for Public Radio International's The World
reported that his MasterCard transaction failed at separate CB ATMs
while a bank employee told him connection was often down "when it was
cloudy".
Currently, CB cannot accept MasterCard or Visa cards
issued by banks in Singapore due to the city-state's increased security
on banking transactions.
source: The Myanmar Times
http://www.mmtimes.com/index.php/business/3718-blame-it-on-the-issuing-banks-visa-says.html
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