Nigeria seeks to prolong detention of Binance executives
Nigerian authorities have asked an Abuja court to extend the
detention of two Binance executives caught up in the country's cryptocurrency
crackdown after an initial warrant used to hold them lapsed this week,
people familiar with the matter said on Thursday.
Tigran Gambaryan, a U.S. citizen and Binance's head of financial
crime compliance, and Nadeem Anjarwalla, a British-Kenyan who is Binance's
regional manager for Africa, flew to Nigeria following the country's decision
to ban several cryptocurrency trading websites, but they were detained on
arrival on Feb. 26.
They have not been charged with any
crime.
The crackdown follows a period after
several cryptocurrency websites emerged as platforms of choice for trading the
Nigerian currency, which has suffered chronic dollar shortages.
Court documents show that the Economic
and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Nigeria's anti-graft agency, was
initially granted an order to detain the two for 14 days to facilitate
investigations.
The order expired on Tuesday and the
men have not been released because the EFCC has asked a chief magistrate's
court in Abuja to extend their detention while investigations continue, said a
person involved in the case but not authorised to speak to the press.
The two executives' lawyers say there
are no grounds for keeping them in detention, the person added.
Another person close to the men's
families said a hearing was set for March 20 when the court can either
dismiss or grant the extension request on the same day or later.
Binance,
the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange, said in a post on X on Wednesday
that it was working with Nigerian authorities to bring back its executives.
The Financial Times reported on Tuesday
that the EFCC had asked Binance to share data on its 100 top users in Nigeria.
Binance has not commented on this.
Anjarwalla's wife, Elahe, said that the
two men were being kept in a guarded house in the capital Abuja and she had been
able to speak to her husband on the phone at least once a day, although he can
only speak in the presence of a guard.

No comments