A senior parliamentarian revealed on Monday that Kenya has approved a bill to regulate digital assets, including 0 initiative comes as the country seeks to boost investments in the digital asset sector by establishing clear rules for the 1 of Parliament Kuria Kimani stated that Kenyan legislators passed the Virtual Asset Service Provider Bill last 2 chairman of the finance committee in the National Assembly acknowledged that the legislation seeks to address concerns over the lack of clear regulations governing the crypto sector in 3 addresses concerns over the lack of clear local crypto regulations JUST IN: BILL TO LEGALIZE #BITCOIN AND CRYPTO IN KENYA IS HEADED TO THE PRESIDENT'S DESK BTC SPREADING GLOBALLY 🔥 4 — The Bitcoin Historian (@pete_rizzo_) October 9, 2025 Kimani argued that the initiative positions Kenya one step closer to joining others, such as South Africa, as the only African country with laws governing the digital asset 5 also argued that President William Ruto needs to sign the legislation into 6 bill reveals that the central bank will be the licensing authority for the issuance of stablecoins and other virtual 7 Treasury will still hold the power to re-establish the authority if the need 8 capital markets regulator will be responsible for licensing firms that wish to operate crypto exchanges and other trading 9 structure mirrors the concerns raised by the Financial Sector Regulators Forum, which warned that matched authorization would lead to legal ambiguity and hinder 10 Kenyan MP added that the legislation provides legal clarity around crypto in the 11 also believes that the bill will likely attract increased investments into the financial technology sector, including from crypto exchanges like Binance and Coinbase, citing past talks between the two platforms and the Kenyan government.
“We are hoping that Kenya can now be the gateway into 12 of the young people between 18 and 35 years of age are now using virtual assets for trading, settling payments, and as a way of investment or doing business.” -Kimani Kuria, Member of Parliament for Molo Constituency, Kenya. Kenya’s move to introduce laws on crypto comes as countries now brace for a boom in U. S. dollar-backed stablecoins , which the Financial Stability Board has warned could undermine the currencies of less developed 13 the digital asset space has grown over the years, regulation has been a concern for governments, which seek ways to prevent criminals from exploiting the anonymity of these 14 revealed that the new legislation has borrowed from established practices in other countries, such as the 15 the 16 is known for pioneering mobile-phone-based financial services, with its M-Pesa technology operated by 17 technology provides services such as money transfer, savings, and investments to millions of 18 comes with provisions for digital asset providers The crypto legislation has also maintained the provision requiring all licensed virtual-asset providers to keep a physical office in Kenya and appoint a board of at least three natural-person 19 lawmakers acknowledged that the initiative aims to curb shell operations and boost accountability in a sector long dominated by offshore entities with little local 20 believe the provision would give local authorities clearer oversight and ensure decision-makers can be held accountable legally in 21 move was met with opposition from some crypto stakeholders, who argued that physical offices are not essential to their 22 new bill also aligns Kenya with global AML/CFT standards while avoiding bureaucratic 23 legislation requires all crypto firms to obtain licenses from the relevant regulator, segregate customer assets, and hold accounts in Kenyan 24 bill also requires crypto companies to appoint compliance officers and undergo independent IT 25 companies will also need to implement detailed anti-money-laundering and data protection 26 the bill was being submitted, stakeholders proposed to introduce a recognition framework for foreign-licensed 27 initiative would allow entry only from vetted jurisdictions and be subject to strict reserve, audit, and custody 28 rules require issuers to maintain 100% collateral, use licensed Kenyan custodians, and ensure full liquidity for 29 your strategy with mentorship + daily ideas - 30 days free access to our trading program
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