Wednesday, October 1, 2025 - The Standards Organization of Nigeria states that the global economy loses over $4.7 trillion through fraud every year, equivalent to nearly seven per cent of the annual revenues of organizations worldwide.
Oserheimen Osunbor, chairman of SON’s National Technical
Committee on Governance of Organizations, said this on Tuesday in Abuja at the
official launch of ISO 37003:2025.
The ISO 37003:2025 is the world’s first international
standard for fraud control management.
Mr Osunbor stated that, despite existing internal mechanisms
and statutory regulations, fraud remained pervasive, facilitated by technology
and artificial intelligence.
According to him, the development of ISO 37003 began in 2018
during discussions at an ISO plenary meeting in Sydney, Australia, which later
led to the establishment of an ad hoc group and the conduct of a global survey.
He said that the findings confirmed the urgent need for a
dedicated fraud control standard, as the economic and social costs of fraud
continued to rise.
Mr Osunbor said that the new standard provided guidance for
organidations to develop, implement, and maintain effective fraud control
management systems, covering prevention, early detection, and response.
He said that the standard, published in May and adopted as a
national standard in Nigeria, represented the first time Nigeria would co-lead
the development of an international standard alongside the UK.
Also speaking, Sorrel Evans, representative of the British
High Commission, described the launch of ISO 37003 as a milestone in the global
fight against fraud.
According to Ms Evans, fraud is not only a financial issue
but a human one that destroys livelihoods, undermines trust, and, in some
cases, costs lives.
She said that the scale of the problem was alarming, citing
an estimated 76 million global victims of fraud annually, and scammers
siphoning off 4.7 trillion dollars in a single year.
“Nigeria alone recorded financial sector fraud losses of
N52.26 billion in 2024, a 295 per cent increase from N17.67 billion in 2023,”
she said.
Evans commended SON, the British Standards Institution
(BSI), and other stakeholders for their leadership in developing the landmark
standard.
She said that Nigeria’s role in ensuring the standard
signaled ambition and commitment to global best practices.
“Fraud thrives in silence and fragmentation, but by
launching ISO 37003, Nigeria, the UK, and their partners are choosing
transparency, unity, and action,” she said.
The director-general of SON, Ifeanyi Okeke, described the
ISO 37003:2025 Fraud Control Management System as a strategic tool to promote
transparency and good governance in the country.
Mr Okeke assured stakeholders that SON would drive effective
implementation of the standard through awareness campaigns, training, and a
credible certification scheme.

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