Tag: CBK

  • Audit Reveals E-Citizen Collections Don’t Reach Treasury Accounts

    Audit Reveals E-Citizen Collections Don’t Reach Treasury Accounts

    The halls of Parliament echoed with sharp questions and mounting frustration on Tuesday as lawmakers summoned Treasury Principal Secretary Chris Kiptoo to explain a financial scandal that has shaken the foundations of Kenya’s digital payment system.

    The Public Accounts Committee, led by Tindi Mwale from Butere, demanded answers after discovering that billions of shillings collected through the government’s flagship eCitizen platform are not reaching Treasury accounts at the Central Bank of Kenya.

    The controversy has its roots in a damning audit report by Auditor-General Nancy Gathungu, whose findings have exposed systemic failures in the country’s most widely used government payment platform.

    At the heart of the scandal lies a staggering figure that has sent shockwaves through government circles: approximately 44.8 billion shillings in eCitizen collections remain completely unaccounted for, raising serious questions about financial transparency and accountability in President William Ruto’s administration.

    The summoning of Kiptoo represents a culmination of years of mounting concerns that have been largely ignored by successive administrations.

    As Mwale emphasized during the committee session, “The PS must come and shed more light on this matter because it’s an issue that affects government departments.”

    His words carried the weight of parliamentary authority, but also reflected the exasperation of legislators who have watched recommendations gather dust while public funds continue to disappear into what appears to be a financial black hole.

    The scope of the problem became clearer when MPs Joseph Namwar from Turkana, Marianne Kitany from Aldai, and Otiende Amollo from Rarieda took turns expressing their concerns.

    Their questions painted a picture of a system operating with alarming opacity, where money flows in but accountability flows out. Namwar’s statement struck at the core of the issue: “It is not clear whether the money collected through the eCitizen platform ends at the exchequer accounts.”

    This uncertainty about the ultimate destination of public funds represents a fundamental breakdown in financial governance.

    Kitany’s observations added another layer to the unfolding scandal, highlighting that “there are cases of billions of public funds being at the eCitizen,” while noting that “its reporting mechanism is wanting.”

    Her words revealed not just missing money, but missing systems of oversight that should have prevented such a crisis from developing.

    Vanishing cash

    The platform, designed to streamline government services and improve efficiency, appears to have instead created new avenues for funds to vanish without trace.

    The urgency of the situation was perhaps best captured by Amollo, who noted that issues with the eCitizen platform have been raised consistently since 2017, yet remain unaddressed.

    His frustration was palpable as he spoke of “so many queries on this eCitizen platform,” expressing the committee’s intention to issue a special letter to the National Treasury demanding explanations for years of inaction on PAC recommendations.

    The parliamentary inquiry took an even more troubling turn when Solicitor-General Shadrack Mose appeared before the committee, unable to explain how revenue was being collected by the State Law Office through eCitizen.

    His admission that “E-citizen does not give us a report” laid bare the extent to which government departments have been operating blind, collecting money through a system they cannot properly monitor or control.

    Gathungu’s audit findings provide the most comprehensive picture yet of the eCitizen debacle.

    Her examination of marriage centers alone revealed that while 116.83 million shillings was recorded from 15 centers, collections from 19 other centers went completely unrecorded due to missing periodic reports.

    This pattern of incomplete record-keeping appears to be systemic rather than isolated, suggesting that the problems run far deeper than initially understood.

    Treasury PS Chris Kiptoo.
    Treasury PS Chris Kiptoo.

    The Auditor-General’s report pulled no punches in its assessment of the government’s control over the eCitizen system.

    Her finding that the government “lacks full system control, relying heavily on vendors for critical functions” exposes a dangerous dependency that has left public finances vulnerable.

    As she warned, “Lack of full control of the system exposes the government to the risk of revenue leakages, lack of full accountability, system unavailability or downtime, security vulnerabilities and business continuity threats.”

    This vendor dependency has created what appears to be an accountability vacuum.

    The private companies managing critical eCitizen functions wield significant control over system configurations and growth support, including the onboarding of new government services.

    This arrangement has effectively placed public financial systems in private hands, with inadequate government oversight to ensure transparency and accountability.

    The scale of the problem becomes more apparent when considering that the eCitizen platform processes hundreds of millions of shillings daily from various government services.

    Citizens use the platform to pay for everything from passport applications to business permits, trusting that their payments are properly channeled to government coffers.

    The audit revelations suggest that this trust may have been misplaced, with significant portions of these payments failing to reach their intended destination.

    The implications extend far beyond mere accounting errors.

    The missing funds represent resources that should have been available for public services, infrastructure development, and social programs.

    In a country grappling with budget constraints and development challenges, the loss of billions in public revenue represents not just financial mismanagement, but a betrayal of public trust.

    The parliamentary investigation has also highlighted the broader governance challenges facing Kenya’s digital transformation agenda.

    While the eCitizen platform was meant to modernize government service delivery and reduce corruption through digitization, it appears to have instead created new opportunities for financial irregularities.

    The promise of transparency through technology has been undermined by inadequate oversight and control mechanisms.

    As the controversy unfolds, questions are being raised about the selection and management of the vendors responsible for the eCitizen platform.

    The extent of their control over critical government systems, combined with the apparent lack of proper oversight, has created conditions conducive to the current crisis.

    The fact that key government officials, including the Solicitor-General, cannot access basic reports from the system they rely on for revenue collection illustrates the depth of the institutional failure.

    The timing of these revelations is particularly significant as the Ruto administration has placed digital transformation at the center of its governance agenda.

    The eCitizen platform was supposed to exemplify the benefits of embracing technology for public service delivery, but the audit findings suggest that insufficient attention was paid to establishing proper controls and accountability mechanisms alongside the technological infrastructure.

    The current crisis demonstrates that technology alone cannot solve governance problems; it must be accompanied by robust institutional frameworks and accountability mechanisms.

    For the millions of Kenyans who use the eCitizen platform daily, the audit revelations raise fundamental questions about the security and reliability of the system they have come to depend on.

    The knowledge that billions in payments may have gone astray will likely undermine public confidence in digital government services, potentially setting back Kenya’s digital transformation agenda by years.

    As Parliament prepares to scrutinize Kiptoo’s responses and demand concrete action to address the identified irregularities, the eCitizen scandal has already achieved one significant outcome: it has forced a long-overdue reckoning with the governance challenges posed by Kenya’s rush to digitize public services. The question now is whether this crisis will catalyze meaningful reforms or simply join the long list of government scandals that generate headlines but produce little lasting change.

  • Attorney General Protecting Sacred Cows As He Blocks CBK From Tabling Forensic Audit On The Fall of Imperial Bank.

    Attorney General Protecting Sacred Cows As He Blocks CBK From Tabling Forensic Audit On The Fall of Imperial Bank.

    After 6 years since the launch of investigations, no single prosecution nor conviction made and when promising findings are made, AG Paul Kihara Kariuki Contravenes to protect the sacred cows from being publicised. AG has clearely contravened the independence of the CBK as articulated in Article 231-3 which states, “The Central Bank of Kenya shall not be under the direction or control of any person or authority in the exercise of its powers or in the performance of its functions.”

    Its a game of cards; personal interests at the expense of constitutionalism.

    The Attorney-General blocked the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) from revealing or tabling in Parliament findings of a forensic audit on the collapse of Imperial Bank. CBK governor Patrick Njoroge and Treasury Cabinet secretary Ukur Yatani said the State could not share findings or summaries of the report with the National Assembly as required under Article 125 of the Constitution. Dr Njoroge said there are several cases related to the forensic audit that are before the courts and further work by investigating agencies was progressing.

    “The Attorney-General advised that, in the circumstances, sharing at this stage the findings and summaries of the forensic audit would undermine investigations and prejudice successful prosecution and defence of the ongoing cases. The overriding objective is to guard against prejudicing the course of investigations,” he said.

    Imperial Bank directors were accused of failing to co-operate with the CBK on the reopening of the bank through their refusal to deposit Sh10 billion as the first step to reviving the lender.

    The CBK then went ahead in 2016 and hired FTI, a specialised forensic accounting consultancy, to Imperial Bank books and assist CBK and KDIC to institute criminal and civil proceedings against those responsible for the collapse of the bank.

    “Given the significance of these cases with respect to the financial sector and also the legal system, and the strong desire not to jeopardise their fair and prompt conclusion, CBK sees considerable risk,” Dr Njoroge said told the Finance Committee.

    He did not disclose the amount paid to FTI after Alego Usonga MP Samuel Atandi demanded to know why CBK still pays the auditor. He said CBK does not pay FTIs fees.

    “This FTI consulting is still in CBK payroll and receiving billions of shillings from 2015. The governor is hiding something. Tell us how much money is this company being paid monthly or has been paid,” said Mr Atandi.

    The Washington DC-based firm was first called in by besieged Imperial Bank directors to look into allegations of massive fraud at the lender following the demise of long-serving Managing Director Abdulmalek Janmohamed.

    A preliminary forensic audit by FTI Consulting revealed that Mr Janmohamed could have discreetly siphoned out Sh39 billion from Imperial Bank between 2002 to September 15, 2015 when he died — and wired the cash to his companies and bank accounts. 

    It was on the basis of FTI Consulting’s primary report that CBK decided to close down the bank on October 13, 2015 and broaden the firm’s mandate to carry out a comprehensive forensic audit into the lender.

    In 2020, FTI’s findings traced Sh3.4 billion in eight bank accounts linked to former Imperial Bank managing director Abdulmalek Janmohamed who was accused of being behind an elaborate fraud scheme that robbed the lender of Sh34 billion over a period of 13 years.

    The Kenya Deposit Insurance Corporation (KDIC) told the court that the accounts were opened using fictitious names under the direction of Mr Janmohamed, who died in September 2015—just a month before the lender was placed under receivership.

    Court documents showed that the late Janmohamed and his associates used 12 companies to open accounts at Imperial Bank into which they deposited massive amounts that were then moved out of the bank before they were immediately closed.

    The transfers were made by a section of the bank’s top managers, including current managing director Naeem Shah and his deputy, James Kaburu. The duo would then manipulate software systems at the bank to ensure the dummy accounts disappeared from the records.

    FTI uncovered the eight banks accounts linked to Mr Janmohammed that were built with cash stolen from Imperial Bank. The accounts were registered as Gulshan Account, which has Sh364 million, Ali Shah account (Sh264 million), Barkat Khan account (Sh376 million), M Khan account (Sh341 million), B Mohamed Account (Sh337 million), Jionesh Shah account (Sh50 million), Zulfikar account (Sh376.5 million) and Hanscombe/Angelica account (Sh1.3 billion). The accounts were in the names Zulfikar Jessa, Zarina Mohammed, Angelica Industries Ltd and Barkat Khan, which court documents show were fake names.

    “The bank claims jointly and severally against the deceased estate and the 2nd, 5th and 6th defendants the sum of Sh3.4 billion which amount was illegally and fraudulently received in trust from the SB accounts, which accounts is made up as follows,” says KDIC in court documents.

    Court documents did not reveal the banks hosting the eight accounts, which have nearly 10 percent of the cash believed to have been siphoned from Imperial Bank. Proceeds of the fraud were mainly invested in real estate properties, offering fresh insights into the role that corruption and crime plays in driving Kenya’s housing market.

    Mr Janmohamed left a vast estate, including prime real estate properties, shares in blue chip companies and loads of cash in various banks. The suit has also revealed a gigantic empire that Janmohamed left behind, which includes a five percent stake in Butali Sugar Mills and another five percent of Imperial Bank.

    Other prominent companies he had a stake in are Old Mutual and Apex Securities. He also had shares in Sandview Properties, Allgate Limited, Serenity Limited, Plymouth Holdings, Upperview Properties, Downtown Holdings and Nature Stone Queries.

    One of his companies, City Park Properties, owns office premises that rake in a total of Sh447,000 monthly. The Imperial Bank founder’s cash was saved in four bank accounts, one each at I&M Bank and National Bank of Kenya, and two at Standard Chartered Bank.

    The Standard Chartered accounts were in foreign currency. Mr Shah and Mr Kaburu, despite revealing the scam to the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK), had not been spared as they were among the respondents in the suit. They admitted to making the illegal transfers but claim they did it on instructions from Mr Janmohammed.

    The list of companies used in the fraudulent scheme includes E. Tilley (Muthaiga) Limited, Primecatch Exports, Mara Fish Packers, J Fish Limited, Victorian Delight, Ruby Red Limited, Value Pak Foods, From Eden Limited, Aqualite Limited, Marmo Granito Mines from Tanzania, Uganda’s Marmo Marbles and Fishways Limited. E. Tilley (Muthaiga) Limited alone admitted to receiving Sh10 billion from the bank and has expressed readiness to return the loot.

    The final FTI report seems explicit and has linked big fish that AG is out to protect by all means. 

  • DCI Probes Dubious Cash Transactions In The New Sh1,000 Notes Change

    DCI Probes Dubious Cash Transactions In The New Sh1,000 Notes Change

    The ongoing demonetization of the old a thousand notes has attracted the attention of the Crime busters at the Directorate of Criminal Investigations who have now focused their keen eye and investigating cases of fishy cash transactions that have been flagged by banks.

    Central Bank Governor Patrick Njoroge says some of those cases are of people who wanted to change over Sh5 million to new currency notes.

    “We have shared the information we have gathered so far with the DCI for further investigations. Our role as the regulator is to work the investigating agencies to ensure that we achieve our goal,” Dr. Njoroge said.

    CBK Chair stated that the banks have collected more than 100 million pieces of old Sh1,000 notes out 217 million pieces that were in circulation when the demonetization started and the investigations on people holding illicit money would continue even after the old notes are phased out from September 30.

    “We expect to collect more notes as the deadline nears because most people like doing things the last minute,” CBK Chair said while on a media interview.

    Dr. Njoroge, however, ruled out 100 percent success of the demonetization, saying some have of the cartels have laundered the illicit proceeds in properties in the country and abroad.

    CBK caught the country by surprise on Madaraka Day when it announced that it was withdrawing the Sh1,000 notes in a bid to counter counterfeits, corruption and money laundering.

    • Shilling strengthens after CBK sells dollars

    During demonetization, individuals exchanging less than Sh1 million of the old notes and non-account holders were instructed to exchange them through the currency centers, CBK branches, and commercial banks. Bank customers and non-account holders having an excess of Sh5 million are required to get Central Bank’s approval.

    The old generation Sh1,000 banknotes will be worthless papers from October 1, 2019. CBK has said it is working with forex bureaus, payment service providers, money remittance providers, investigative agencies and other financial service providers to ensure all due procedures are followed.

    Kenya is not the only State that has changed their currency, India scrapped 500 and 1000-rupee banknotes in 2016 to flush out tax evaders a move that flopped as it did not achieve the desired goal as 99 percent of the money still got back into the system.

    Africa’s self declared most debt-ridden country,  Nigeria,  introduced a new currency and banned the old notes in 1984, under the Muhammadu Buhari government. But this caused chaos and was blamed for the inflation that followed and crashed the economy.

    Ghana also attempted a similar move in 1982 when it ditched its 50 cedis note to deal with rampant tax evasion and empty excess liquidity. It had the downside of fuelling a currency black market.

    North Korea tried this in 2010 but ended up leaving citizens with no food and shelter after Kim-Jong ll knocked off two zeros from the face value of the old currency in order to kick out the black market.

    There have been at least five success stories where the exercise worked for the economy and resulted in the intended outcomes.

    These include Pakistan (2016), the UK (2002), Australia (1996), and the EU (2002). Zimbabwe attempted in 2015 and succeeded having gone for the US dollar.

  • CBK Trolled By KOT With Their ‘elfu moja kama change’ Reply

    CBK Trolled By KOT With Their ‘elfu moja kama change’ Reply

    As the country prepares to completely, according to CBK, do away with Old a thousand notes. Netizens have comically rubbished Central Bank Of Kenya’s tweet about the set September 30th deadline.

    It all started when CBK governor Patrick Njoroge posted this reminder

    Then ironically, a Kenyan social media user commented with a question that “Pal na makanga akinipea noti mzee ntado?”

    CBK replied using their verified twitter account and told the user that he, rather everyone else, should not accept the old sh 1K notes as balances.

    But local netizens trolled the reply from CBK with some asking them, ‘Kwani makanga atakupea Thao kama change juu mko na noti ya thao Kumi?’

    Here’s more troll comments about the CBK’s tweet:

  • CBK To Crackdown Unlicensed Online Forex Dealers

    CBK To Crackdown Unlicensed Online Forex Dealers

    Central Bank of Kenya Chair Patrick Njoroge has warned Kenyans from conducting business with the unlicensed and unregulated online forex dealers who, according to the Institution, are planning a massive swindling scheme.

    According to CBK, the now increased online forex dealings are conducted by a web of fraudsters who, if not regulated as soon as now, many Kenyans who have enrolled in the business risk being conned.

    “The attention of CBK has been drawn to the unlicensed and unregulated online forex dealers and platforms that put Kenyans at risk of losing their money,” said CBK.

    CBK through its chair has advised Kenyan to always double-check the licensing status of the online forex dealers from the CBK websites to confirm authenticity.

    CBK states that some of the characteristics of these unregulated fraudster dealers and platforms include, purporting to offer the best forex deals in the market, lack requisite licenses issued by CBK or Capital Markets Authority, inadequate anti-money laundering and consumer protection safeguards.

    “The platforms are downloadable on Google Play and Apple App store, and aggressively market themselves through social media and mass emails,” CBK further stated.

    In the event where some have already been defrauded of their cash, CBK officials said that the victims, if any already, should report their case to CBK through the Banking Fraud Investigations Unit.

    CMA Chief Executive Paul Muthaura In October 2018, said he observed several individuals and entities carrying on or purporting to carry on the business of an online foreign exchange broker or a money manager without the relevant license by the Authority.

    “The Capital Markets Authority (CMA) has issued only one license to EGM Securities Limited) to operate as a Non – Dealing Online Foreign Exchange Broker,” Muthaura said in a statement.

    CMA has assured those in the forex business that the Authority will take necessary measure and appropriate action against any persons illegally conducting online foreign exchange trade.

  • CBK Directs That CRB Shouldn’t Blackist Anyone Until Six Months

    CBK Directs That CRB Shouldn’t Blackist Anyone Until Six Months

    Central Bank of Kenya has nullified listing of loan defaulters to credit reference bureau.

    Millions of Kenyans have been listed on CRB, which permanently blocks them from accessing another loan before clearing with them at a fee.

    CBK has issued a new directive to commercial banks,m stating that a borrower will only be considered to have defaulted a loan after six months and will not be listed on CRB before that.

    The directive comes at a time when lenders had forwarded more than 2.7 million Kenyans to be listed on the CRB for defaulting their loans.

    According to CBK, the directive will affect both mobile loans and normal loans, which implies that, Kenyans will only be listed on the CRB only after defaulting a loan for six months.

    However, CBK’s directive doesn’t affect digital lenders like Tala, Branch, Okash, who forward millions of Kenyans for listing on credit reference bureaus after failing to pay a loan within 30 days.

    Currently, CRB has listed more than 2.7 million Kenyans with 500,000 of them having defaulted loans of 200 shillings and below.

    Research indicates that we have more than 500 digital lenders who give Kenyans instant loans via their mobile loans.

    Currently 90 percent of borrowers in Kenya are accessing loans via mobile loan apps.

    Commercial banks, microfinance, and CBRs were given three months period to adjust and start using the new guidelines.

    Template given in the new directive will classify non-performing as per prudential guidelines which state that “any loan, which is past 180 days shall be classified as doubtful.”

    Millions of Kenyans have been calling CBK to regulate mobile money lenders who are charging exorbitant interest rates on desperate Kenyans.

    It pains many to see how CBK has thrown people’s biggest problem under the bus.

    Digital lenders have blocked financial freedom for millions of Kenyans. Something doesn’t add up in all this.

    How do you skip a complain where someone who has been forced to pay CRB sh2,200 for a clearance certificate because he was listed to to the bureau for defaulting 200 shillings?

    The same Dr. Patrick Njoroge, CBK’s governor who once termed mobile lenders as “enhanced Shylocks who use digital platforms to prey on Kenyans with high-interest rates on their micro-loans.”!