Take action to stem flow of dirty cash into Kenya

 

Concept of money laundering. [Getty Images]

A report by Kenya’s Financial Reporting Center indicates that more than 6,600 suspicious transactions were recorded in the country last year, a 12 per cent rise from 2022.

The money finds its way through several sectors including real estate, retail and entertainment among others, with the full or tacit cooperation of commercial banks, investigators, lawyers and regulators.

The situation is so bad that Kenya has been placed on the ‘grey list’ of the global Financial Action Task Force (FATF) as one of the jurisdictions under increased monitoring for systemic gaps that weaken the global fight against money laundering, terrorist financing and illicit financial flows.

Unfortunately, Kenya’s grey-listing by the FATF barely caused a ripple in government circles, even as the National Treasury was extending the begging bowl to the IMF for more loans.

An assessment conducted in 2022 found that despite having legislation in place for anti-money laundering and combating of terrorism financing Kenya still has gaps, limiting the compliance and effectiveness of these laws. The country has also been cited as a route through which money pilfered from countries experiencing governance challenges including Somalia, Sudan and DRC are laundered and repatriated to off-shore sources.

Illicit financial flows have a debilitating impact on economies. Kenyans have long believed that the country’s property market, particularly in Nairobi and other large towns, is largely distorted by capital from questionable sources. Economists also say that money laundering has disproportionately affected the economy and driven up prices across all sectors. It has artificially distorted the value of the shilling and compromised government service delivery.

As the government pushes ahead with its ambition to attract new foreign direct investment, it is crucial to review and update the Proceeds of Crime and Anti-Money Laundering Act 2009 to today’s realities.

The investigative agencies also owe it to Kenyans to ensure those implicated in corruption are prosecuted and their ill-gotten wealth seized and repatriated back to the taxpayers.

Business
Why the IMF is not doing enough to support Africa
Opinion
Leveraging PPPs to address Kenya's infrastructure crisis
Business
Skyward Express launches Nairobi to Dar es Salaam flight
Business
Scientists root for genome editing to boost food security