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0 sats \ 11 replies \ @KenyaCoin OP 3 Mar 2022 \ parent \ on: Mercury restricted a number of accounts linked to African startups and didn’t exactly say why | TechCrunch bitcoin
I immediately excused myself from the table to make a call. The dinner was to be paid by the company using the Mercury corporate card I had and by a quick scan on our order, I knew I did not have enough funds on any one card to cover the cost of dinner.
The financial operations of many companies run by African founders have simply bring brought to a halt overnight.
The fact that 100s of banking accounts owned by Africans across the continent were suddenly blocked shows us that this is clearly a bigger structural issue.
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We were told that all the accounts that were blocked had “linked activity”, we are now in a holding pattern waiting for the official statement on what type of activity could have linked all of these companies asides the fact that they were all African.As of the writing of this piece, I have not seen any public complaint on this by a startup without African founders.
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Day 3 of our bank accounts being arbitrarily blocked by @BankMercury. Not sure which is more surprising, that the issue hasn’t been sorted out or that the ecosystem is just going about their business like this isn’t a major issue.
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So what are the alternatives?Our crypto fam have risen to the occasion to explain how using decentralized finance can solve for this. In the shorter term, some startups have shared that they can provide international banking services to African founders.
2.) Eversend is a one-stop financial services hub allowing Africans to exchange, save, manage and send money at the best possible rates, both online and offline.
Eversend also permits buy and sell of bitcoin, stablecoins and other cryptocurrencies, in some of their regions (e.g., Uganda).
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Another article on the subject:
African startups had their bank accounts suspended. Russia sanctions might be to blame
https://restofworld.org/2022/african-startups-had-their-bank-accounts-suspended-russia-sanctions-might-be-to-blame/
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