Connect with us

General News

Kenya: Law Changes to Protect Members of Collapsed Saccos in Kenya

Published

on

[ad_1]

Kenya’s Cabinet approved amendments to the Savings and Credit Cooperatives (Sacco) legislation, which seeks to implement a deposit protection scheme for members of collapsed Saccos and boost confidence in a sector bogged down by corruption and mismanagement.

The Sacco Societies Regulatory Authority (SASRA) said relevant amendments to the Sacco Societies Act (2008) have been approved by the Cabinet and are awaiting to be tabled in parliament.

“We are moving on well. The amendments to the Act have been approved by the Cabinet and we are waiting for parliamentary approval,” the authority’s acting Chief Executive Peter Njuguna told The EastAfrican last week.

The Sacco Societies Act, Section 55 provides for the establishment of a Deposit Guarantee fund for the Sacco sector to provide protection for members’ deposits, but not shares, up to an amount of Ksh100,000 ($926) in the event that an institution collapses as a result of governance and liquidity challenges.

The fund, which is an equivalent of the defunct Kenya Deposit Protection Fund (DPF) in the baking industry, shall be run by a board of trustees comprising the chairman and chief executive of SASRA, principal secretary to the National Treasury, Central Bank governor, Commissioner of Co-operatives and four members nominated by Sacco societies and appointed by the Treasury Cabinet secretary.

The board of trustees shall be chaired by a person elected from among its own members.

The Sacco Deposit Guarantee fund shall be financed through contributions from Saccos, investment income, borrowings, donations and grants.

However, there are questions about the viability of the depositors’ insurance scheme to instil confidence in the Co-operative sector, with policy makers raising a red flag over rampant corruption and mismanagement in the sector.

In 2019, the State Department for Co-operative Societies, Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC) and the Ethics Commission for Co-operative Societies (ECCOs) signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) to expeditiously deal with the rot within the Sacco sector promulgated through corruption, fraud and mismanagement.

EACC’s chief executive Twalib Mbarak, warned Saccos to run the institutions with integrity and professionalism, noting that the Commission had received 400 complaints from co-operatives, 16 of which fell under the Commission’s mandate.

The State Department for Co-operatives said the sector continued to face various challenges such as weak governance, poor management by boards/committees and corruption.