Money Markets

African Islamic finance faces an image problem

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Customers at the Gulf African Bank. The bank offers a wide range of Shariah based products. Photo/FREDRICK ONYANGO

Customers at the Gulf African Bank. The bank offers a wide range of Shariah based products. Photo/FREDRICK ONYANGO 

By REUTERS  (email the author)
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Posted  Thursday, May 6  2010 at  00:00

“We have targeted these two countries initially. They have large customer base groups that would find sharia banking attractive. We are aware that 40 per cent of Africa’s people are Muslims,” he told Reuters late on Tuesday.

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Just about half of Tanzanians are Muslims, Moodley said.

About 80 per cent of Tanzanians live in rural areas and 95 per cent of that group remains without formal banking services, according to the finance ministry.

Moodley said the bank hoped to launch Sharia-compliant loan products in a few month’s time, once it had pooled enough funds from its savings product.

“If we require funding at the time that we wish to launch the lending products, and we don’t have sufficient liabilities from deposits that have come through Sharia itself, then we would look for alternative sources of sharia-compliant funding,” he said.

The bank’s Islamic banking window was, however, not planning to participate in government paper auctions yet.

Islamic banking operates on a small scale in a few sub-Saharan countries, such as Kenya, South Africa, Botswana and Nigeria.

Industry participants say Malawi, Uganda and Zambia would be next.

Each have minority Muslim populations.

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