July 2 (Reuters) - Australian lender ANZ has been sanctioned for failing to stop or refund fees for dead customers and not responding to their representatives within a required time frame, a committee that looks at the banking industry's practices said on Tuesday.

The Banking Code Compliance Committee (BCCC), a self-regulation body, had in June 2023 come out with its Deceased Estates Report, which looks at how banks in Australia had compiled with the required obligations. The BCCC had then began an investigation into three lenders, including ANZ Group.

The practice of continuing to charge fees from dead customers prominently featured during the Hayne Royal Commission, which was established in December 2017 by the Australian government.

"The decision to name ANZ for its non-compliance reflects the seriousness of its code breaches," BCCC chair Ian Govey AM said in a statement on Tuesday.

"Naming a bank is a sanction that we reserve for the most serious and systemic breaches."

ANZ did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Despite initially identifying the issues in early 2022, ANZ has taken more than a year to implement solutions and then nearly 2 years to begin the customer remediation program.

The customer remediation program is still ongoing and expected to be finalised by July-end.

Govey further flagged certain concerns with the remediation efforts of ANZ.

The lender should have done more to urgently remediate the affected customers, Govey said, adding that the remediation did not meet expectations.

ANZ will pay around A$3.3 million ($2.19 million) in remediation to 18,852 impacted customers, the committee said in its investigation report. ($1 = 1.5058 Australian dollars) (Reporting by Rishav Chatterjee in Bengaluru; Editing by Sonia Cheema, Nivedita Bhattacharjee and Rashmi Aich)