The director general of Nigeria Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Emomotimi Agama, said that the country was open to Stablecoin companies which respect local regulations.
According to an English -language local media report, the cable, Agama said that Stablecoin companies that respect local regulations were welcome to Nigeria. “Nigeria is open to Stablecoin’s affairs, but in terms of terms that protect our markets and empower Nigerians,” he said.
“We have joined certain companies focused on Stablecoin applications, while guaranteeing compliance with basic risk management principles,” said Agama, adding that these companies had been admitted through the SEC regulatory sandbox.
Agama made its comments Thursday at the top of Nigeria Stablecoin in Lagos. During a round table, he said that the regulation of stablecoins was essential to the development of Nigeria.
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He stressed that the regulation of stablecoins is essential to the financial development of Nigeria. “When the history books document the financial revolution of Africa, it will remain in the memories today as the moment when we have gone from potential to action.” This has echoed a recent change in the approach of Nigeria to cryptographic regulations.
At the end of May, a change in the local cryptocurrency regulation led Blockchain.com to announce plans to open a physical office in Nigeria, its “fastest market” in West Africa. “Nigeria has taken significant measures towards the creation of a clear framework for the crypto,” said Owenize Odia, CEO of Blockchain.com for Africa, reportedly said at the time.
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In March, Nigerian Information Minister Mohammed Idris said that many cryptographic companies operating within the country did not face a dispute or criminal proceedings. Application efforts aimed “to strengthen our laws, and to paralyze anyone. We make sure that no one comes and works without regulation, “he said.
The remarks followed Nigeria exceeding a legal action of $ 81.5 billion against Binance in February, saying that the scholarship caused the Krach of the local currency of Nigeria, the Naira. Local prosecutors also argued that Binance owed 2 billion dollars back taxes while the Nigerian government continued to combat sensible cryptographic policy.
Despite the Nigerian authorities accusing an Crypto exchange of being responsible for the devaluation of the local currency, some officials have strongly explained the technology. In a March article, Mohammed Idris, Nigeria Minister of Information, acknowledged that “blockchain technology and other digital assets are no longer on the sidelines of our economy”.
He added: “They quickly become at the heart of the way our employees transact, create and build.”
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