Business Report Opinion

Cybersecurity month perspective: why AML and cybersecurity are critical to Africa’s crypto future

Samukele Mkhize|Published

As cryptocurrency becomes part of daily life across Africa, the debate over security and trust is no longer optional; it’s urgent.

Digital assets are reshaping how people move money, invest, and build businesses.

But with that transformation comes sharper risks: money laundering, fraud, and cybercrime. For crypto to thrive across the continent, we need strong anti-money laundering (AML) and cybersecurity frameworks not as afterthoughts, but as the pillars of credibility.

 AML frameworks are global standards designed to prevent criminals from disguising illicit funds as legitimate income, targeting crimes such as tax evasion, corruption, and market manipulation.

While these standards apply worldwide, local context ultimately determines their impact.

In Africa, where illicit financial flows cost economies tens of billions of dollars each year, effective AML enforcement is not just a regulatory issue; it’s an economic imperative.

Compliance regimes like South Africa’s FICA or Kenya’s Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASP) Bill are gaining force. These laws aim to stop criminals from disguising illegal funds as legitimate.

At their core are Know Your Customer (KYC) practices, which play a role in verifying identities, monitoring transactions, and flagging risk. What was once heavy paperwork is now powered by AI, which screens against sanctions lists and surfaces anomalies in real time.

For crypto platforms, the responsibility scales even higher. Blockchain’s speed and borderless nature offer both advantages and risks.

Without safeguards, actors can exploit it. With them, the transparency of the ledger becomes a defence.

Binance has invested deeply in compliance and security infrastructure - every user is verified, and AI has been deployed to monitor suspicious activity. We partner with blockchain-intelligence firms and law enforcement, especially in Africa, to detect and block abuse before damage is done.

 A powerful example of collaboration is “Operation Serengeti 2.0,” an INTERPOL‑led crackdown across Africa from June to August 2025.

Through coordinated action across multiple countries, authorities arrested 1,209 cybercriminals, dismantled 11,432 malicious infrastructures, and recovered $97.4 million.

Binance, as part of the Cybercrime Atlas Initiative, contributed threat intelligence, OSINT mapping, and investigative support.

This operation took down everything from ransomware networks to a $300 million crypto scam in Zambia that victimized 65,000 people.

It also exposed illegal crypto mining operations in Angola, where seized power stations were redirected to benefit communities.

This kind of public-private cooperation is exactly what Africa needs. Criminals don’t respect borders, so OSINT tools that trace cross-jurisdictional networks, from Côte d’Ivoire to Germany, make investigations sharper and more actionable.

Sharing that data with law enforcement amplifies the effectiveness of every operation.

Security is as critical as compliance. Binance combines cold storage, multi-signature wallets, and the SAFU emergency fund, which are all backed by independent certifications like ISO 27001.

These tools protect user funds and data, ensuring even as attack tactics evolve. In markets where mobile is king and financial fraud is a daily worry, these defences are essential.

 Africa’s opportunity lies in balancing inclusion with integrity. With hundreds of millions still unbanked, crypto offers a powerful pathway to financial access.

Overly strict controls, however, risk excluding those users.

That’s why innovations like decentralized identity and zero-knowledge proofs, which allow user verification without compromising privacy, are essential.

Equally important is leadership, even in markets where regulation is still evolving.

Binance supports self-regulation, participation in industry associations, and proactive engagement with authorities across African jurisdictions. We view compliance not as a hurdle, but as a catalyst for growth and trust.

The evidence is clear: digital assets in Africa can only flourish on a foundation of trust and credibility.

By combining world-class AML and cybersecurity standards with regional sensitivity, exchanges become trusted bridges, not risk vectors.

The stakes are high, but the potential is transformative. At Binance, we don’t see compliance as a burden; we see it as a responsibility, one that helps unlock a safer, more inclusive financial future across Africa.

Samukele Mkhize, Head of Compliance for Binance.

BUSINESS REPORT

Samukele Mkhize, Head of Compliance for Binance. 

Image: Supplied.