Banks are rushing to implement a directive by the Central Bank
of Kenya (CBK) on declaration of the contents of safe deposit boxes held
in lenders' vaults.
Last week, banks continued writing
to their customers urging them to adhere to the directive that seeks to
curb potential for abuse of the privacy of the facilities by money
launderers.
The CBK mid this year wrote to lenders
instructing them to have their customers disclose the nature of any
content stored in the boxes by December 31.
"We have
received new guidelines from Central Bank of Kenya requiring banks to
verify the contents of locker deposit boxes availed to their customers
in line with existing Anti Money Laundering and Proceeds of Crime
Regulations," wrote I&M Bank in a notice to customers holding such
boxes.
"Consequently, we request that you arrange to
visit (your branch) where your safety box is held at your earliest
convenience but not later than 31 October 2020 for this exercise."
Bankers said the new policy would boost the fight against money laundering.
"This
places responsibility on the banks to verify the contents of the safe
deposits to ensure that they conform to the guidelines. Illicit content
can no longer pass," said Kenya Bankers Association chief executive
Habil Olaka.
Safe deposit boxes offer clients the
possibility to store items such as jewels, art or any other valuables in
a private and highly secure bank vault.
In the
circular to chief executives of all regulated financial institutions,
the CBK had asked lenders to verify contents of the boxes to minimise
the risk of these services being used for illegal activities, including
money laundering.
"For the customers who were genuinely
using the boxes for keeping things legally acquired safely away, not
much change other than the additional intrusive requirements from the
banks," Mr Olaka said.
"The few customers who may have
been tempted to stash illegally acquired items in the boxes will have to
move elsewhere. This keeps the banking system insulated from
penetration by money laundering activities."
Detectives
in March last year impounded $20 million (Sh2 billion) in what they
said was fake currency at the Barclays Kenya Queensway Branch (now Absa
Kenya) in Nairobi.
The seizure exposed the weak underbelly of customer surveillance systems in the Kenyan banking sector.
The lender said then that one of its customers at the branch had kept the fake currency in a safe deposit box.
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