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UK to repatriate Sh450m stolen by two of Kenya’s richest men

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The United Kingdom has agreed to repatriate back to Kenya, millions of dollars of public funds allegedly stolen by two of the country’s richest men, following a landmark agreement signed in London on Monday.

The repatriation deal which Kenya struck with Jersey, a self-governing Island in the English Channel, will see the return of the sum of Sh450m allegedly stolen by Samuel Gichuru, a one time boss of Kenya’s power company and former Finance Minister, Chris Okemo

They duo allegedly siphoned the money through taking kickbacks from multinationals which they stashed in a company registered in the Island.

This arrangement, known as the Framework for the Return of Assets from Corruption and Crime to Kenya (Fracck), gives the Jersey authorities licence to unfreeze money they believe was stolen and send it back before those accused of stealing it go on trial.

The Kenyan corruption web was uncovered after Gichuru had a messy divorce from his wife, Salome Njeri, in 2006; not satisfied with the settlement she got from her estranged husband, Njeri made a report to the police alleging that some of her husband’s assets were being hidden in offshore accounts in Jersey.

The revelation led to a nine-year investigation by the Jersey authorities across 12 jurisdictions and in 2011, the duo were indicted and charged to court.

The were accused of committing economic crimes including cutting deals with a Finnish firm to construct a power station in Mombasa, Kenya’s second largest city, and taking millions of pounds in kickbacks from British, Norwegian and German engineering firms, as well as a US communications giant.

The Jersey authorities issued arrest warrants for both men and have been waiting for their extradition from Kenya ever since, while a Jersey-registered company, Windward Trading Limited, accused of laundering money for the two men, pleaded guilty to four counts of money laundering in a Jersey court.

The court ruled that the company, whose ultimate owner was revealed to be Gichuru, should be return more than $4.9m (£3.6m) to the Kenyan government.

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Nigeria’s Insurance Corporation raises maximum deposit coverage from N500k to N5m

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The maximum deposit insurance coverage levels for Deposit Money Banks has been raised by the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) on Thursday from N500,000 to N5 million.

At a news conference in Abuja, NDIC Managing Director Bello Hassan declared this effective immediately. He said, “For Deposit Money Banks, the increase of the maximum deposit insurance coverage from N500,000 to N5,000,000, would provide full coverage of 98.98% of the total depositors compared with the current cover of 89.20%. Regarding the value of deposits covered, the revised coverage would increase the value of deposits covered by deposit insurance to 25.37% compared with the current cover of 6.31% of the total value of deposits.

“The increase of the maximum deposit insurance coverage from N200,000 to N2,000,000 would provide full coverage of 99.27% of the total depositors compared with the current level of 98.76% and would increase the value of deposits covered by deposit insurance to 34.43% compared with 14.38% of the total value of deposit, currently covered.

“The increase of the maximum deposit insurance coverage from N500,000 to N2,000,000 would provide full coverage of 99.34% of the total depositors compared with the current 97.98% and would increase the value of deposits covered by deposit insurance to 21.04% compared with 10.77% of the total value of the deposit, currently covered.”

Additionally, Hassan said that increasing the maximum deposit insurance coverage for primary mortgage banks from N500,000 to N2,000,000 would cover all depositors, or 99.99% of them, and increase the value of deposits covered by deposit insurance from the current 40.60% cover to 43.10% of the total deposit value.

Additionally, the Corporation increased the maximum pass-through deposit insurance coverage for each Mobile Money Operator subscriber from N500,000 to N5,000,000.

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Nigerian banks close over two million accounts

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At least two million bank accounts have been closed by different commercial banks in Nigeria following the failure of their owners to update and link them to the National Identity Number (NIN) and the Biometric Verification Number (BVN).

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) had, in December 2023, issued a directive to all commercial banks in the country to restrict Tier-1 accounts without proper BVN, and NIN, that are not linked by March 1st, 2024.

The move by the apex bank, was aimed at eradicating questionable accounts, particularly as some customers failed to comply with regulatory orders on the linkage of their accounts to the NIN, BVN and other requirements.

According to a statement on Wednesday by the Nigerian Interbank Settlement System (NIBSS), the decision to close the accounts was arrived at following the expiration of the CBN deadline.

The NIBSS also indicated that the number of inactive bank accounts grew month-on-month by four million or 2.0 percent to 19.7 million in March 2024 from 19.3 million in the previous month which necessitated a weeding of the process.

The NIBSS, however, indicated that the number of active bank accounts in the country grew by 6.62 million or 3.0 percent to 219.64 million from 213.02 million in February.

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