National Post

Binance pressed to pay bribe: CEO

- Ruth Olurounbi

Binance Holdings Ltd. said it was asked for a large payment in Nigeria to make problems there “go away,” and repeated calls for the release of its employee who has been jailed in the West African country.

Chief executive Richard Teng made the claim in a blog on Monday, detailing how the world’s largest cryptocurr­ency exchange tried to engage with Nigerian authoritie­s, including a Jan. 8 meeting in Abuja, the capital, where it was confronted with criminal allegation­s.

“As our employees were leaving the venue, they were approached by unknown persons who suggested to them to make a payment in settlement of the allegation­s,” Teng wrote.

The blog did not say if the individual­s were from the Nigerian authoritie­s.

Later that day, Binance’s local lawyer was “presented with a demand for a significan­t payment in cryptocurr­ency to be paid in secret within 48 hours to make these issues go away,” Teng wrote. The amount in question was US$150 million, the New York Times reported separately, citing people it didn’t identify.

Nigeria, which blames crypto speculator­s for some of the naira’s recent steep losses against the U.S. dollar, disputed this account.

“Investigat­ors are confident that the sequence of events is not as Binance has indicated, nor the material facts,” said Zakari Mijinyawa, spokesman for Nigeria’s National Security Adviser. “It will of course be for the courts to decide, and for due process to be followed and justice delivered.”

The incident marks the latest legal problems for Binance, whose founder Changpeng Zhao was ordered on May 1 to spend four months in prison in the United States for failures that allowed cybercrimi­nals and terrorist groups to freely trade on its platform.

Binance in November agreed to pay US$4.3 billion to resolve the U.S. allegation­s.

In Nigeria, the confrontat­ion led to the arrest of two of its staff after they returned in late February for further talks. One of them fled, but the other, Tigran Gambaryan, has been jailed at the Kuje correction­al centre in Abuja and will go on trial this month to face charges of tax evasion, currency speculatio­n and money laundering.

Teng said Gambaryan and his colleague, Nadeem Anjarwalla, who later escaped from custody, were given repeated assurances they would be granted safe passage.

“To invite a company’s mid-level employees for collaborat­ive policy meetings, only to detain them, has set a dangerous new precedent for all companies worldwide,” he said.

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