 The Nigerian Deposite Insurance Corporation, NDIC Thursday, hinted that directors of the recently closed 183 microfinance banks, MFBs and primary mortgage banks, PMBs, would soon be investigated for their roles in the collapse of the institutions. Managing director, chief executive NDIC Billo Hassan disclosed these in Lagos at a workshop organized by the Corporation for Law Enforcement Agencies. Hassan said that the workshop is a demonstration of NDIC's commitment to collaborating with other agencies against financial malpractices and insider abuses in banks. It's a traditional workshop for law enforcement agencies. It's an annual event which is meant to collaborate with relevant agencies that are involved in the fight against, you know, curtailing financial malpractices and fraud in financial institutions, particularly in banks and, you know, other financial institutions. The essence is to ensure that we sustain it and bring to book errant directors, officers, managers of these banks that led to that collapse. There falls the opportunity of getting the officers, you know, further enlightened, further sensitized about going on in the financial services industry. You know, we are all aware that in the industry, just like any other industry, you have malpractices happening around there in the food industry, in the banking industry, but in a very regulated industry, it is necessary that the integrity, the technical nature of the operations in the banking industry needs to be understood for law enforcement agencies to be able to do their investigative work. The advent of technology, the internet and the phone, people have, I mean, migrated from the local crimes that we used to see to international crimes. There are no borders anymore. People can stay in one country, commit crimes.