Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) kitty that holds fines paid by banks
in breach of regulations swell 20 times on the back of penalties
lenders paid for hiding suspicious in connection with the theft of funds
at the National Youth Service (NYS).
CBK financial statements, which was released Friday, indicate that fines kitty had Sh420 million in the year to June 2019.
Penalties totalling Sh392.5 million were imposed on Standard Chartered Kenya
, Equity , Diamond Trust , Co-operative Bank and KCB Group
in September 2018 for failing to report suspicious transactions.
This means that the NYS fines accounted for 93 percent of the cash that flowed into the kitty in the year to last June.
“Penalties
from commercial banks and foreign exchange bureaus was Sh420 for year
ended June 2019 from Sh21 million in 2018” CBK said in the published
financial statements
“The Act has been empowered to administer fines, penalties on
institutions as well as individuals who have violated the Proceeds of
Crime and Anti-Money Laundering Act,” said the regulator separately.
The NYS payment helped to boost CBK non-core revenues to Sh1.37 billion from Sh644 million in the year to June 2018.
The
non-core revenue comes from items like licence fees from commercial
banks and foreign exchange (Sh281 million), Sh371 million from tuition
fees and hospitality services from the Kenya School of Monetary Studies
and tent income from Thomas De La Rue Kenya Limited (Sh2 million).
Dozens of senior government officials and business people were
charged in May 2018 with various crimes related to the theft of billions
of shillings from the NYS, which was billed as a new effort to crack
down on widespread corruption.
The regulator said that
the banks had failed to report large transactions and to undertake
proper due diligence on customers. It also accused them of approving
large transactions without proper documents.
The banks
had received a total of more than Sh3 billion from the NYS on behalf of
their customers Findings of CBK’s inquiry had been passed to criminal
detectives to assess whether they would bring any charges.
In
March, the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) fined the five banks a
total of Sh385 million to defer prosecution for not reporting the
suspicious transactions under anti-money laundering laws.
Chief
Prosecutor Noordin Haji said he was deferring prosecuting the banks to
see if they met a deadline to improve their practices.
“Prosecution
is not necessarily the only solution to the problems we are faced with,
especially when it comes to the issue of graft and money laundering,”
he said.
“The banks had failed to report suspicious
transactions. They were not part and parcel of the corruption crime or
the graft crime itself.”
Globally, regulators publicly
slap banks with huge fines for breach of rules set to combat money
laundering and the financing of terrorism.
In 2019,
global penalties for non-compliance with money laundering rules and
know-your-customer (KYC) requirements hit a total of Sh3.8 trillion ($36
billion) according to Fenergo, a global firm that audits clients for
banks.
Some of the biggest fines in the past decade
include the Sh270 billion ($2.5 billion) fines against Citicorp,
JPMorgan Chase & Co., Barclays PLC, The Royal Bank of Scotland plc
and UBS AG for manipulating the price of US dollars and Euros at the
spot market known as the Libor scandal.
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