Africa leads in regulating digital assets against financial crime

African nations like Kenya and Ghana have enacted new laws to regulate virtual asset service providers, addressing rising financial crime risks in the digital economy. These frameworks aim to balance innovation with safeguards against money laundering and fraud. The moves come as global cryptocurrency thefts exceed $2 billion annually.

The digital financial landscape has grown increasingly interconnected over the past decade, bringing convenience but also heightened risks from financial crimes such as money laundering and cyber fraud. Criminals exploit gaps in oversight, particularly in digital assets like cryptocurrencies, which have seen over $2.17 billion stolen from services according to a Chainalysis report from July 2025. These incidents affect individuals and businesses, from families losing savings to scams to startups facing liquidity crises.

In response, African countries are taking proactive steps. Kenya formalized its Virtual Asset Service Providers Bill in November 2025, establishing licensing requirements, compliance standards, and supervisory oversight for virtual asset service providers (VASPs). The bill incorporated input from industry players like Yellow Card to ensure strong anti-money-laundering (AML) and counter-terrorist financing (CTF) measures while fostering innovation.

Ghana followed suit with its Virtual Asset Service Providers Bill, 2025, which gained presidential assent by the end of December 2025. This legislation legalizes and regulates cryptocurrency activities, previously operating in a legal gray area. Oversight involves the central bank, securities regulator, and financial intelligence unit to monitor transactions, enforce identity verification, and curb illicit flows.

As Japhet Gana, Group Head of Transaction Risk & Financial Crimes at Yellow Card, notes, 'Regulation that confronts financial crime head-on doesn’t stifle innovation – it enables it by eliminating fear and establishing a foundation of trust.' Yellow Card, operating in 20 African countries among 34 markets, emphasizes robust identity verification and transaction monitoring to build secure systems.

These frameworks create a 'safe zone' for digital assets, promoting economic inclusion in emerging markets without the overshadowing fear of fraud. By prioritizing transparency and enforcement, Kenya and Ghana position Africa as a leader in balancing digital finance growth with financial integrity.

関連記事

ケニア刑事捜査局は、急増する暗号通貨詐欺に対処するための専用ユニットを設立した。この取り組みは、2024年の投資家損失が4,330万ドルに達する中で行われたもので、最近の規制改革と一致し、より安全なデジタル資産環境を育むものである。

AIによるレポート

South Korea's financial regulator plans to revise laws and boost international cooperation to combat rising money laundering activities. The Financial Services Commission aims to empower the anti-money laundering agency to freeze suspicious accounts and impose curbs on international criminal rings. It will also strengthen regulations on virtual assets.

2025年末の記録的な27億ドルの暗号通貨窃盗に関する報告を基に、違法アドレスは2025年に少なくとも1540億ドルを受け取り、前年比162%増となった。これは、2026年1月8日に公開されたChainalysisの2026年暗号通貨犯罪レポートの序文による。この急増は、制裁対象エンティティへの資金流入が694%増加したことが主因で、その要因を除いてもほとんどの違法カテゴリで成長が見られた。レポートは、国家関与や専門的なマネーロンダリングサービスを含む暗号通貨犯罪のプロフェッショナル化を強調している。

AIによるレポート

The Financial Regulatory Authority (FRA) has released its 2025 annual report, titled From Regulation to Empowerment, documenting unprecedented advances in Egypt's non-banking financial activities. Mohamed Farid, the FRA chairperson, described 2025 as a turning point in reaping the benefits of reforms launched since 2022.

 

 

 

このウェブサイトはCookieを使用します

サイトを改善するための分析にCookieを使用します。詳細については、プライバシーポリシーをお読みください。
拒否