Saturday 16 January 2021

COMPANY BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP DISCLOSURE IN KENYA

 COMPANY BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP DISCLOSURE IN KENYA.

A beneficial owner has  been referred to  be the ultimate owner or controller of a legal person, either their ownership interests or positions held within the legal entity some of such persons include; natural persons who control the entity through ownership interests, also known as (threshold approach), shareholders who exercise control alone or together with other shareholders including through any contract or relationship, also known as( majority approach), natural persons who control the entity through other means for instance personal connections, natural person who exerts control without ownership but participates in its financing and natural persons who control the entity through  strategic decisions which fundamentally affect its business

In 2013, FAFT (Financial Action Task Force) revised its Recommendation 24, so as to include measures for obtaining detailed customer identification and verification as well as to distinguish between high risk and low risk countries.

The objective of the FAFT recommendation on beneficial ownership disclosure is to prevent the misuse of legal entities for money laundering or terrorist financing, but the same can be useful standard   to detect other related offences such as corruption and tax evasion.

Pursuant the FAFT Recommendations, the Kenyan Law under Section 93 of the Companies Act, 2015 stipulates that a company shall make a disclosure of the beneficial owners of its shares and prepare a register of the same. 

This provision therefore  incorporates the OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development) principles on beneficial ownership as recommended by Financial Action Task Force (FAFT), it is opined that even though the beneficial ownership principle has been argued as ineffective tool for reason it has a wide threshold of 25 percent shareholding, for an owner to qualify to be a beneficial owner of a company, the Kenyan Beneficial Owners regulations have capped the threshold at 10 percent shareholding, to this end it is opined  that the capping  will be effective in curbing the use of offshore accounts for money laundering, corruption and tax evasion by public officers.

It is pursuant the regulations that the registrar of companies has issued a deadline of 30th January 2021 deadline for the registration of beneficial owners of all private companies, with a penalty of Kshs500,000 for non-compliance.

CHEGE KAMAU ADVOCATE

Partner @ CHEGE & SANG CO ADVOCATES.

LLM candidate UoN (Financial Secrecy Jurisdictions/offshore Accounts)