Rwanda’s capital market ecosystem has begun preparing for a regulated digital assets future as industry stakeholders gathered this week for a virtual assets awareness session organized by the Capital Markets Authority of Rwanda (CMA Rwanda) amid a broader national push to formalize the cryptocurrency sector.
The session, faciliated by Crystal Intelligence and Tether Ltd, followed the recent approval by Parliament of the draft law on virtual assets business.
The awareness session brought together representatives from
- The Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning,
- National Bank of Rwanda,
- Financial Intelligence Centre,
- Rwanda Revenue Authority,
- Rwanda Finance Limited,
- law enforcement agencies,
- Rwanda Law Reform Commission,
- Rwanda Stock Exchange, and
- The Capital Markets Authority.
According to the regulator, the awareness initiative aimed to improve understanding of virtual assets as Rwanda moves toward establishing a formal legal and regulatory framework for the sector. The discussions focused on:
- investor protection,
- market integrity,
- anti-money laundering compliance, and
- the role digital assets could play
in Rwanda’s growing financial ecosystem.
At the workshop, the Chief Executive Officer of the Capital Market Authority Romeo Ngarambe said awareness and technical capacity are important as Rwanda prepares to regulate the virtual assets sector.
“Virtual assets present both opportunities and challenges, and the framework we have adopted strikes a good balance between the opportunities and potential risks,” Ngarambe said.
Ngarambe added that the framework will also help address risks linked to money laundering and terrorism financing, which remain key concerns in the virtual assets sector. He noted that effective implementation of the law will require strong technical knowledge and close collaboration among public institutions, regulators and market stakeholders.
The awareness campaign comes as Rwanda’s parliament intensifies efforts to pass landmark crypto legislation that would officially regulate virtual asset businesses in the country.
In early May 2026, Rwanda’s Chamber of Deputies adopted a law governing virtual asset businesses establishing what lawmakers described as a secure regulatory framework for digital finance while seeking to protect citizens from fraud and pyramid schemes linked to unregulated crypto activity.
The proposed framework would require companies offering crypto and virtual asset services to obtain licenses from CMA Rwanda before operating. The law also introduces stricter anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing requirements while opening the door for regulated tokenization and digital investment products.
Rwanda’s parliament first approved the relevance of the draft virtual assets bill in March 2026 marking a major shift for a country whose central bank had previously maintained a cautious stance toward cryptocurrencies.
Lawmakers have argued that regulation is necessary as crypto adoption grows locally with parliament citing increasing participation in digital asset markets alongside rising concerns over scams and unlicensed investment schemes.
The move positions Rwanda among a growing number of African countries developing formal crypto oversight frameworks as governments across the continent seek to balance innovation with consumer protection and financial stability.
Stay tuned to BitKE for updates on regulatory developments across Africa.
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