By LYNET IGADWAH, ligadwah@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
The Central Bank of Kenya’s (CBK) unit charged with
supervising lenders lacks a tech savvy team to watch over transactions
amid a confidence crisis after the collapse of three banks, Parliament
was told Tuesday.
Gerald Nyaoma, head of bank supervision department, told MPs
that his unit lacks the expertise to audit banks’ Information
Technology (IT) systems—which rogue and greedy directors have exploited
to lend themselves billions of shillings of depositors’ funds, breaching
banking regulations.
“I acknowledge the key role that ICT experts would
play at the department and this is the advice I personally gave the
governor (CBK head Patrick Njoroge),” said Mr Nyaoma.
“We initiated recruitment in December 2015 where we advertised for IT openings but are yet to conduct the interviews,” he added.
In the absence of the experts, he said, the CBK has had to rely on external auditors.
The closure of three banks in the last eight months has shaken up the confidence of depositors in the banking sector.
Chase Bank, Kenya’s 12th largest bank with deposits
of nearly Sh100 billion, will re-open Wednesday after it was put under
receivership in April 6.
Last August Dubai Bank, valued at Sh2.92 billion,
collapsed followed closely in October by Imperial Bank which went down
with Sh58 billion of depositors’ funds.
A weak CBK supervisory unit was blamed for failing
to detect early enough banking executives who were busy cooking
financial books to present a rosy picture to shareholders and cover up
insider lending perpetuated by directors.
MPs reckon that a supervisory unit backed by ICT
experts would have detected the malpractices at the infancy, rescuing
depositors’ funds.
“How can a serious institution like the CBK
investigate an ICT savvy institution like Chase Bank without being
equipped with IT experts?” Posed Benjamin Langat, who chairs National
Assembly’s Finance committee.
Banks have in recent years spent billions of shillings in upgrading their IT networks, easing paper work in their transactions.
Imperial Bank was placed under receivership after
it was discovered that its senior management manipulated its IT system
to conceal malpractices including irregular lending of Sh29 billion of
depositors cash.
Investigations also showed that there were clear
indications that there were cases of money laundering and cheque
knitting schemes at the bank.
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