Details of how hackers allegedly compromised UBA ATM Infrastrature and stole $2 million in one night has emerged.
NewsOnline Nigeria reports that the recent cyberattack on United Bank for Africa (UBA) Senegal has become one of the most significant banking security incidents in West Africa, exposing the growing sophistication of cybercriminals targeting financial institutions across the continent.
According to a recent advisory issued by the Nigeria Computer Emergency Response Team (ngCERT), cybercriminals fraudulently withdrew more than $2 million from UBA Senegal through 3,421 ATM transactions in what experts describe as a coordinated ATM cash-out, or “jackpotting,” attack. The incident has reignited concerns about the resilience of Africa’s digital banking infrastructure as financial institutions accelerate their digital transformation.
Understanding the UBA Senegal Attack
Unlike conventional ATM fraud involving stolen debit cards or isolated account compromises, an ATM cash-out attack targets the banking infrastructure itself.
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According to ngCERT, the attackers are believed to have gained privileged access to the bank’s card authorization infrastructure, allowing them to manipulate transaction controls, including withdrawal limits and fraud detection mechanisms, before coordinating thousands of ATM withdrawals across multiple locations.
The operation was reportedly executed within a single night, suggesting months of planning and the involvement of an organized criminal network rather than opportunistic fraudsters.
How ATM Cash-Out Attacks Typically Work
Although investigators have not publicly disclosed the exact technical methods used against UBA Senegal, cybersecurity professionals say attacks of this nature generally follow a predictable sequence.
1. Initial Network Compromise
The first objective is usually to gain access to a bank’s internal network.
This can happen through:
- Targeted phishing emails sent to bank employees
- Compromised VPN credentials
- Exploitation of unpatched server vulnerabilities
- Insider assistance
- Third-party vendor compromise
In many sophisticated attacks, hackers remain undetected inside the network for weeks or even months before launching the actual theft.
2. Privilege Escalation
Once inside, attackers attempt to obtain administrator-level access.
Security researchers note that cybercriminals often move laterally through the network, harvesting credentials and identifying systems responsible for card authorization, ATM switching and payment processing.
At this stage, attackers may use well-known post-exploitation techniques and credential theft tools to increase their privileges.
3. Manipulating Payment Infrastructure
The most critical phase involves compromising systems that authorize ATM withdrawals.
According to ngCERT, attackers may manipulate:
- ATM withdrawal limits
- Card parameters
- Transaction velocity controls
- Fraud monitoring thresholds
- Payment authorization settings
These changes effectively instruct ATMs to approve transactions that would normally be rejected.
4. Coordinated Cash-Out
After compromising the authorization infrastructure, criminal syndicates deploy dozens—or even hundreds—of cash mules across multiple cities.
Each operative withdraws cash simultaneously using cloned or fraudulently configured payment cards.
Because the withdrawals occur at nearly the same time, fraud monitoring systems have very little opportunity to detect and stop the attack before millions of dollars disappear.
Cybersecurity experts describe this synchronized activity as the defining characteristic of ATM cash-out operations.
Why the Attack Matters Beyond Senegal
The ngCERT advisory warns that financial institutions operating similar ATM and payment systems across Africa face comparable risks.
Nigeria’s banking sector, one of the continent’s largest and most digitally connected, could become an attractive target for increasingly sophisticated cybercrime groups.
The advisory notes that successful ATM cash-out attacks can result in:
- Massive financial losses
- Compromise of core banking systems
- Customer account manipulation
- Data breaches
- Regulatory penalties
- Loss of public confidence
- Operational disruption across ATM and branch networks
ngCERT’s Security Recommendations
Following the UBA Senegal incident, ngCERT has urged banks to strengthen their cybersecurity posture by implementing stronger controls around ATM infrastructure and payment systems.
Among its recommendations are:
- Multi-factor authentication for privileged accounts
- Continuous monitoring of payment authorization systems
- Stronger network segmentation between ATMs and core banking systems
- Enhanced real-time fraud analytics
- Frequent penetration testing
- Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) deployment
- Regular firmware updates for ATM infrastructure
- Improved employee awareness against phishing attacks
- Tighter monitoring of third-party vendor access
- Continuous auditing of changes to withdrawal limits and authorization parameters
A Wake-Up Call for African Banks
Africa’s financial sector has rapidly embraced digital banking, mobile payments and electronic transactions over the past decade. While this transformation has improved financial inclusion, it has also expanded the attack surface available to sophisticated cybercriminals.
The UBA Senegal incident demonstrates that modern banking threats are no longer limited to individual customer fraud but increasingly target the financial infrastructure itself.
As banks continue investing in digital services, cybersecurity experts say investment in threat intelligence, continuous monitoring and proactive defence will become just as important as investment in new financial products.
Ultimately, the attack serves as a reminder that cybersecurity is no longer just an IT issue—it is now a core business and financial stability issue for banks across Africa.
















