Flutterwave loses more money as Kenya court freezes another $3.3 million


A Kenyan High Court has frozen more accounts of Africa’s biggest fintech startup, Flutterwave, over allegations of money laundering.

Kenya’s authorities said the Nigerian firm had no approval to conduct cross-border payments in the country, and accused it of fraud. The court earlier ordered that its 29 bank accounts with Guaranty Trust Bank, 17 with Equity Bank and six with Ecobank be frozen.

The startup at the time dismissed the claim of financial impropriety against it as “entirely false”, saying it had records to verify this.

In a new development, the court has ordered that another Ksh 400.6 million (3.3 million USD) belonging to the startup be seized, Kenyan Wallstreet reported.

“A Kenyan High Court has frozen another Ksh 400.6 million in three bank accounts and 19 Safaricom M-Pesa paybill numbers belonging to Flutterwave linked to card fraud and money laundering,” the paper said.

Since April, Kenya’s Asset Recovery Agency received orders to search and inspect transactions made by seven entities suspected to have been used as conduits for money laundering in the guise of providing merchant services.

The aggregate amount of funds alleged by the ARA to have been laundered or labeled as suspicious via Flutterwave or associated companies is over $200 million, which led to the subsequent freeze of numerous accounts linked to these entities.


The country’s central bank governor, Patrick Njoroge, later said Flutterwave and Chipper Cash are not licensed to deliver cross-border payment services in Kenya.

Since it announced securing $250 million in Series D funding shooting its valuation beyond the $3 billion mark in February, Flutterwave has since become Africs’s biggest fintech startup.


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A Kenyan High Court has frozen more accounts of Africa’s biggest fintech startup, Flutterwave, over allegations of money laundering.

Kenya’s authorities said the Nigerian firm had no approval to conduct cross-border payments in the country, and accused it of fraud. The court earlier ordered that its 29 bank accounts with Guaranty Trust Bank, 17 with Equity Bank and six with Ecobank be frozen.

The startup at the time dismissed the claim of financial impropriety against it as “entirely false”, saying it had records to verify this.

In a new development, the court has ordered that another Ksh 400.6 million (3.3 million USD) belonging to the startup be seized, Kenyan Wallstreet reported.

“A Kenyan High Court has frozen another Ksh 400.6 million in three bank accounts and 19 Safaricom M-Pesa paybill numbers belonging to Flutterwave linked to card fraud and money laundering,” the paper said.

Since April, Kenya’s Asset Recovery Agency received orders to search and inspect transactions made by seven entities suspected to have been used as conduits for money laundering in the guise of providing merchant services.

The aggregate amount of funds alleged by the ARA to have been laundered or labeled as suspicious via Flutterwave or associated companies is over $200 million, which led to the subsequent freeze of numerous accounts linked to these entities.


The country’s central bank governor, Patrick Njoroge, later said Flutterwave and Chipper Cash are not licensed to deliver cross-border payment services in Kenya.

Since it announced securing $250 million in Series D funding shooting its valuation beyond the $3 billion mark in February, Flutterwave has since become Africs’s biggest fintech startup.


Support PREMIUM TIMES’ journalism of integrity and credibility

Good journalism costs a lot of money. Yet only good journalism can ensure the possibility of a good society, an accountable democracy, and a transparent government.

For continued free access to the best investigative journalism in the country we ask you to consider making a modest support to this noble endeavour.

By contributing to PREMIUM TIMES, you are helping to sustain a journalism of relevance and ensuring it remains free and available to all.

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