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Bank of Credit and Commerce International 1972–1991

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Niger

Panoramic view of Niamey city, capital of Niger with Niger river on right. 25 June 2019

Bank of Credit and Commerce Niger SA opened in 1985 as wholly subsidiary of BCCI that testified to BCCI's long-term commitment to serving the needs of developing countries of the Third World.

Country information

Niger, officially the Republic of the Niger, is a landlocked country in West Africa named after the Niger River. It is bordered by Libya to the northeast, Chad to the east, Nigeria to the south, Benin and Burkina Faso to the southwest, Mali to the west, and Algeria to the northwest.

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Map of Niger. WWW.FREEWORLDMAPS.NET

The country's name comes from the Niger river which flows through the west of the country. 

Two thirds of the surface area is desert, from the sub-Saharan Sahel in the north to the semi-desert and savannah in the south. 

Niger was one of the last African countries to be colonised by Europeans. France increased its military efforts to conquer Niger after the 1885 Berlin conference which carved Africa into regions for the colonial powers.

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Flag of Niger

Niger became a colony of France in 1922, administered as part of French West Africa.

In 1946 Niger became an overseas territory of France with its own parliament and representation in the French national assembly. Niger gained its full independence on 3 August 1960.

The Grand Mosque in Agadez, Niger, with a tall minaret made entirely of mudbrick considered the tallest mud-brick structure in the world.  The mosque is part of the historic centre of Agadez dating back to the 15th and 16th centuries.

There are four important towns in Niger. Niamey the capital and largest city, which has a cosmopolitan character, with European and African rural styles. Zinder an older town than Niamey which was the capital of Niger until 1926 with close links with Nigeria. Maradi situated in the heart of the peanut-growing region near the Nigerian frontier. The town is particularly renowned for its red goats, the skins of which are exported to Europe and the Americas. Agadez, on the southern edge of Sahara desert known as the gateway to the desert, which gained importance after the discovery of uranium ore.

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Uranium mine in Arlit in the Agadez region, the first mine that started in 1971. Uranium was extracted by open top strip mining. At its peak in the 1980s, 40% of Niger's uranium production came from Arlit. mindat.org

The nearest port is at Cotonou in Benin, 1,000km away, and the river Niger has traditionally formed the country's main trading link with the outside world. 

Along with seven other French speaking countries, the currency of Niger is the CFA franc, with a common central bank, the Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO).

Population and Language

The country had a rural population that was about 5.9 million in 1985, with about one-fifth living in urban towns.

Niger had ten official national languages, but the official language was French inherited from the colonial period.

Economy

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Two thirds of the surface area is desert, from the sub-Saharan Sahel in the north to the semi-desert and savannah in the south. 

Despite these disadvantages, the country is predominantly agricultural. Farming is concentrated in the narrow belt of more fertile land in the valley of the river Niger, where 90% of the population lives, and along the southern border with Nigeria. 

The most important factor in the national economy is uranium, which is mined near the north-western town of Arlit and at Akouta. Niger was already the world's fifth largest producer of this vital resource. This was particularly significant because Niger was, in the 1980s considered the least developed country in the world, one of the poorest and most remote of the world's developing countries.  

The main activities were agriculture, including livestock rearing and fishing and mining of gold and uranium.
Degraded and desertification of land in Niger. African Wildlife Foundation

Government revenue was derived mainly from export of agricultural products and export of raw materials, especially uranium ore which was the key to Niger's future development.

Niamey, Niger: modern building of the Ministry of Mines and Energy, Boulevard de la Republique 

Uranium was not the country's only mineral resource there were considerable reserves of coal, gold, iron ore, tin, phosphates, gypsum, tin, molybdenum, and oil. Since 1980 the use of locally mined coal instead of oil for power generation had allowed the government to reduce oil imports. There were also large deposits of oil, particularly along the border with Chad, and exploration licences were being granted.

Niger has always given every encouragement to reputable foreign investors, and their presence amongst us is a mark of confidence in Niger's economy and its prospects for the future. We therefore extend a warm welcome to BCC Niger and invite it to contribute its efforts in the cause of national development.
H E Brigadier-General SEYNI KOUNTCHE President of the Supreme Military Council Head of State Republic of Niger

BCC Niger Niamey branch

The formal opening of Niamey branch in 1980 was inaugurated by Niger's Minister of Finance, Mr Boukary Adji.

Niamey branch was located at: 

lmmcuble El Nasr
BP 12792, Niamey

Telephone: (227) 734287 / 734288 / 734289
Fax: (227) 733303
Telex: 5456 BCCNI

Mr Boukary Adji, Niger’s Minister of Finance in the centre cutting the ribbon, on the right is Mr Hameed Akhtar from BCC and Mr Iqbal Rizvi, Africa I Region of BCC Central Support Office in London, United Kingdom.

Mr Hameed Akhtar of BCC was the first country manager in Niger. 

BCC's strengths were a willingness to be flexible and innovative, coupled with BCC's known expertise in short term lending and trade finance.

The government has adopted a policy of privatising certain industries and this is likely to encourage interest from overseas investors. BCC has a significant role to play in these changes.  

In the first phase of development of business for BCC Niger a great deal of time was invested to create a local awareness of the bank in a country that was so remote. As aware grew, BCC Niamey started taking deposits and followed the BCC group policy of concentrating on short-term financing, particularly in imports and exports. The branch was also active in road building industry that was set for expansion in 1985.

With the growing volume of business in Niger, there were plans to open a second branch at Maradi but this did not materialise because BCC was abruptly shut down in 1991.

Mr Hameed Akhtar, country manager BCC Niger (centre in white suit) with other BCC family of BCC Niamey branch.

BCC Travellers Cheques

A notable success was an agreement that BCC Niamey branch reached with the Minister of Foreign Affairs whereby all official delegations going on foreign missions would use BCC travellers cheques.

Hajj pilgrims

With Niger’s large Muslim population BCC ​also undertook the sale of insurance-linked BCC travellers cheques to Hajj Pilgrims setting out to perform their Hajj pilgrimage.

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From 1987 BCC Niamey branch had a BCC travellers cheques counter at the airport in the country’s capital after obtaining the necessary authorisations.

BCC was the only bank in Niger that made a special effort to cater for the needs of the Hajj Pilgrims and this was greatly appreciated by the Minister of Finance, and by the national manager of the Banque Centrale (central bank). 

BCC Niamey benefited in being to communicate BCC’s presence in Niger and attract affluent people and businesses, including a large cross-section of the country’s population coming to the capital from the interior regions of Zinder and Maradi.

Financial Highlights

More...

BCCI closure

On 5 July 1991 the Bank of England and other regulators in the west decided to freeze BCCI Group's assets and abruptly shut down BCCI's operations worldwide.

The priority of the governments and central banks in some countries was to protect their people and the local operations of BCCI continued in a different name after the assets and liabilities were acquired by private investors or another bank.  

"The central bank of the Monetary Union of West African States announced last week that BCCI branches in Niger, Togo, Senegal and Ivory Coast were financially sound and would reopen soon." (apnews abidjan: 1 August 1991).

The Niamey branch of BCC Niger (100% owned by BCCI) was closed from 8 July 1991 while the BCCI liquidators were negotiating to sell the bank.  No further information is available.

BCCI Group majority shareholders deplore action to shut down BCCI.

The BCCI Group majority shareholders considered the abrupt action by western central banks to shut down BCCI in 1991 was unjustified when they already had detailed discussions with the Bank of England and other regulators on a restructuring plan and would have injected further capital, if required. 

  • The Statement of the majority shareholders of the BCCI Group: Press Release.
U.N. Study Assails the Way B.C.C.I. Was Shut by Western Central Banks.

In a 24-page report not made public​ but sent to some 60 central bankers worldwide, the United Nations Center on Transnational Corporations said that by simply shutting down the 70-nation banking network that financed international trade of $18 billion a year, the economic damage fell hardest on countries like Nigeria, Bangladesh and Zambia, where B.C.C.I. was an important institution. (New York Times, Feb 5, 1992)

  • Draft Report on the Meeting of Experts on New Issues for International Cooperation in Transnational Banking - The closure of a transnational bank, BCCI, on 5 July 1991: London, United Kingdom, 29 November 1991.

Also read: 

  • Global Presence 

Acknowledgment:

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  • BCCI the Bank
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  • Perspective
  • Beginnings
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  • Corporate Identity
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    • Africa I - French speaking
      • Cameroon
      • Djibouti
      • Gabon
      • Ivory Coast
      • Morocco
      • Niger
      • Senegal
      • Togo
    • Africa II - English speaking
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