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Namibia Sets the Stage for National Crypto Strategy With New Law

Namibia Sets the Stage for National Crypto Strategy With New Law

  • Namibia’s new crypto law sets out licensing requirements for firms and mandates the appointment of a regulator to oversee the sector.
  • Although the law lacks clarity on how crypto will be treated by regulators, the framework will help usher in more comprehensive laws, lawyers in the country say.
  • Namibia has a new law for crypto and while it provides little clarity for service providers it sets the groundwork for future legislation, according to local legal experts.

    The South African nation in July passed the Virtual Assets Act into law, which requires a regulator to oversee the crypto sector, and includes licensing requirements for service providers like exchanges. But Namibia has a long way to go to catch up with countries around the world – including its neighbor South Africa – in setting up comprehensive laws and rules for the sector.

    The act is exciting and timely but only a “skeleton” of what the crypto space needs, Ronald Nanub, economist at the Office of the Prime Minister in Namibia, said in an interview with CoinDesk.

    For one, the act requires a regulator to oversee the sector, but a watchdog has yet to be chosen. Although the regime is trying to bring virtual asset providers “to the same standards that you would have on exchange controls and financial institutions,” the lack of clarity on how a chosen regulator might treat crypto could stop companies from setting up in Namibia, said Diana Vivo, associate at law firm DLA Piper Africa (ESI) Namibia.

    Doing a 180

    The Virtual Assets Act is a dramatic turnaround from the Namibian central bank’s previous stance that crypto exchanges were illegal in the country. The bank said in 2017 that there were no legal provisions for exchanges to operate.

    The new law changes that as it subjects crypto firms to the Financial Intelligence Act’s anti-financial crime provisions and the Companies Act. Firms must be incorporated in Namibia and have a registered office in the country in order to get a license. If a crypto firm operates in the country without a license, it could face up to 10 years of imprisonment or pay a penalty of 10,000,000 Namibian dollars ($671,572).

    The new law also sets requirements for consumer protection, preventing market abuse and money laundering. But the act is only the first step to setting up a comprehensive regulatory strategy, according to Nanub.

    Next steps

    Namibia needs a crypto tax framework that is “fit for purpose,” according to Nanub, because the country doesn’t…

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