Money Markets
By GEORGE NGIGI
In Summary
Insurers will be required to conduct
know-your-customer (KYC) exercise, appoint a money laundering reporting
officer and file compliance reports on any suspicious transactions with
the regulator every three months.
IRA though was mum on ownership disclosure of insurance
firms, which has been cited as a key weakness of the financial sector in
fighting illicit cash.
“An insurer or an insurance intermediary can be involved knowingly or unknowingly in money laundering and financing of terrorism activities thus exposing it to legal, operational and reputational risks,” warned IRA.
“An insurer or an insurance intermediary can be involved knowingly or unknowingly in money laundering and financing of terrorism activities thus exposing it to legal, operational and reputational risks,” warned IRA.
Insurers will have to vet their customers to
identify those who have a high risk of handling dirty money based on
their place of birth, source of income, mismatch between product sort
and real needs, among other factors.
Some of the vulnerabilities in the insurance
industry include use of life policies as collateral to buy other
financial instruments including loans, which may merely be one part of a
sophisticated web of complex transactions.
Inflated and bogus claims
Inflated and bogus claims, for example, through
arson can allow fake claims to be made and recover part of invested
illegitimate cash under general insurance.
“Re-insurance may be used by establishing
fictitious (re)insurance companies and intermediaries fronting
arrangements and captives (clients),” said IRA.
Insurers will be required to develop internal policies and training manuals for staff to keep out the illicit cash. The IRA is following other regulators — Capital Markets Authority and Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) — in putting in place guidelines to rein in dirty money.
Insurers will be required to develop internal policies and training manuals for staff to keep out the illicit cash. The IRA is following other regulators — Capital Markets Authority and Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) — in putting in place guidelines to rein in dirty money.
Illicit inflows have been cited as key funding for
terror activities, which had afflicted the country in recent past. Such
inflows also entrench economic inequality and undermine social
institutions.
Little is also known about owners of insurance
firms, creating room for ill-intentioned persons to own institutions for
the purpose of cleaning money or forwarding returns to finance terror.
The CBK has recently ordered all banks to disclose shareholders with a stake greater than five per cent.
“I would urge legislatures to consider implementing
changes to our national laws that would enhance our national
registries, particularly as relates to the obtaining and sharing of
beneficial ownership information,” said CBK governor Patrick Njoroge in a
statement published last week.
gngigi@ke.nationmedia.com
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