Uganda's finance watchdog calls for crypto regulations in the country

Published at: May 24, 2021

Uganda’s Financial Intelligence Authority wants the government to come up with clear-cut crypto regulations.

According to a report by Ugandan media outlet Daily Monitor on Monday, the FIA has asked the country’s finance ministry to develop a legal framework for cryptocurrency regulations in Uganda.

Sydney Asubo, executive director of the FIA, made the call during a meeting with stakeholders over the weekend. According to Asubo, the need for crypto regulations in Uganda has become of paramount importance given the noncompliance of industry participants to the agency’s licensing requirements.

Indeed, the FIA amended the country’s Anti-Money Laundering laws to include crypto exchanges and other virtual asset providers, or VASPs. However, the FIA director revealed that several VASPs continue to operate illegally, with only a few platforms electing to register with the AML watchdog.

For Asubo, the FIA’s inability to maintain strict oversight on crypto exchanges and VASPs, in general, was a blow to the agency’s desire to regulate the country’s cryptocurrency sector. “Virtual assets service providers are now in category 16 of the most vulnerable to terrorism financing and money laundering,” Asubo added.

Apart from money laundering risks, Asubo identified investment scams as another risk of the current lack of crypto regulations in Uganda. As previously reported by Cointelegraph, fraudsters have leveraged the current popularity of cryptocurrency to siphon money from unsuspecting victims via elaborate digital currency investment scams in Uganda.

As previously reported by Cointelegraph, more than 5,000 victims of Dunamiscoins — an alleged crypto scam — petitioned the government for a return of losses incurred by investing in the purported Ponzi scheme.

Indeed, the principal actors of the alleged $2.7 million Dunamiscoin scam also stood trial amid crackdowns by the government against cryptocurrency Ponzi schemes back in early 2020.

The FIA’s call for cryptocurrency regulations also comes as global music star Akon is set to build a crypto city in Uganda. Akon received approval from the government in April for a one-mile futuristic city powered by his Akoin cryptocurrency.

Tags
Law
Aml
Related Posts
13 more crypto firms withdraw licensing applications in the UK
The United Kingdom Financial Conduct Authority’s (FCA) crypto licensing regime is reportedly proving arduous for cryptocurrency businesses looking to operate in the country. According to a Reuters report on Tuesday, the number of withdrawn licensing applications from crypto businesses increased by over 25% in June. Indeed, Cointelegraph reported near the beginning of the month that 51 crypto firms had withdrawn earlier submitted filings for registration with the FCA. An FCA spokesperson quoted by Reuters said that 13 more companies have pulled out of the approval process, bringing the total number of withdrawals to 64. Since January 2020, the FCA has …
Regulation / June 29, 2021
Experts say new South Korean crypto rules will create a monopolized market
South Korea is heading into a new period for its crypto industry, with stringent new rules coming into effect on Thursday that will require all cryptocurrency businesses to comply with new crypto reporting regulations and registration rules. As an article from the Korea Herald outlines, industry experts fear that the impact of the new measures — specifically, the incoming Specific Financial Transactions Act — will have damaging consequences for most domestic cryptocurrency firms. The act requires all virtual asset operators to seek official registration, for which they must show evidence that they are operating using real-name accounts at South Korean …
Regulation / March 23, 2021
CoinEx crypto exchange to remove all mainland China users in October
CoinEx cryptocurrency exchange is winding down operations in mainland China to comply with local anti-crypto regulations. The company officially announced on Thursday that it was going to completely retire user accounts verified as mainland China citizens as well as those linked to a mobile phone number from mainland China. The exchange has asked mainland China-based users to withdraw their crypto assets from the platform before Oct. 31, 2021. CoinEx then plans to disable accounts with zero assets starting from Thursday, Sept. 30. “All access will no longer be available to your accounts,” the exchange stated. Despite CoinEx’s aggressive measures to …
Bitcoin / Sept. 30, 2021
Russia: Bitcoin Activity Rising Despite Strict Law Proposals
A branch of the Russian federal government has recently published a draft of new litigation called “On Digital Financial Assets,” which is focused on enforcing strict cryptocurrency laws in the country. The legislation has not been approved yet and has been in discussion since 2018. The new laws define Bitcoin as property but not legal tender, and propose, among many other things, that Bitcoin (BTC) miners register as individual companies so they can be appropriately taxed. President Putin is planning on developing and revealing a new tax for Bitcoin miners by July 1, but many are skeptical about the government’s …
Blockchain / July 1, 2020
Uphold becomes registered crypto-asset firm in UK post-FCA approval
A European subsidiary of United States-based crypto trading platform Uphold has received approval from the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). According to the FCA website, Uphold’s U.K. subsidiary Uphold Europe Limited gained regulatory approval on Feb. 17, 2022, joining the select list of 32 firms that have received FCA approval as a Registered Crypto Asset service provider, out of the 200 that applied. The approval signifies that the firm is in compliance with the U.K. Anti-Money Laundering and CounTerrorist Financing regulations. In order for crypto exchanges and service providers to offer their services to U.K.-based customers, they must register …
Regulation / Feb. 23, 2022