Kenya's banking regulator has issued a warning to lenders found to be handling graft proceeds.
The Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) Governor Patrick Njoroge said Thursday that the banks will face stiff sanctions.
He was addressing bankers at the 7th Annual Research Conference organised by the Kenya Bankers Association (KBA) in Nairobi.
Dr
Njoroge said CBK is ready to crack the whip again on any rogue bank
which helps ship out money from public institutions illegally obtained
from graft.
“Two weeks ago we took action against some
of your institutions because of non-compliance with integrity laws. Make
no mistake,” warned Dr Njoroge.
“We will not hesitate
to do it again under similar circumstances. Banks must steer away from
being used as conduits for ill-gotten funds,” he added.
He said bank chiefs owe a duty of care to the public not to abet or aid graft in public institutions.
“The Kenyan people demand that, from all of us, and will take us very unkindly if we look the other way,” Dr Njoroge said.
Penalised
Nearly a fortnight ago, the CBK fined five banks $3.1 million for their role in aiding the movement of the stolen funds.
The
penalised banks were KCB Group, the region’s largest bank by assets
which was slapped with a $1.49 million fine, Equity Bank $895,000,
Standard Chartered Bank-Kenya $775,000, Diamond Trust Bank $560,000 and
Co-operative Bank of Kenya $200,000.
The office of the
Director of Public Prosecutions said it was also preparing charges
against bank executives for their alleged role in helping ship out more
than $30 million of money stolen from Kenya's National Youth Service
(NYS) two years ago.
The law requires all financial
institutions to file daily reports with the Financial Reporting Centre
on transactions above $10,000 and those deemed suspect. CBK accused the
five banks of failing to comply with the requirements of Kenya’s
Anti-Money Laundering/Combating Financing of Terrorism laws and
regulations.
An individual found guilty of contravening
the Crime and Anti-Money Laundering Act faces a prison term not
exceeding 14 years or a fine of Ksh5 million ($50,000).
-Reporting by Brian Ngugi and The EastAfrican Reporter
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