My phone rang this morning at 9am. It was Ian Narev, the CEO of CBA. It is a call I have been waiting nearly six years for now. I had offered to meet with him when I still worked at CBA. I offered to meet with David Turner, the chairman of CBA, a year ago to set him and the Board straight about the things CBA were saying publicly that were not true. He politely declined.

A year and a scathing Senate report later and I will be meeting with Ian Narev in a couple of weeks time. He was friendly and seemed sincere in his desire to finally fix this problem that has run out of control.

Unconvinced: Whistleblower Jeff Morris says Ian Narev is still in the dark about what happens in his organisation. Credit:Brendan Esposito

At 10am I began reading the CBA press release. Alarm bells started ringing loudly in my ears. It sounds alright but I have heard it all before. I’m sorry but the CBA can’t be in control of this process. They should not be the first point of contact for victims. The process should not rely on victims coming forward at all. Many are old and sick and frightened. Some are dead.