The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe recently placed restrictions on cryptocurrency exchanges in the country. This has affected the services of Golix, the countryās biggest exchange. Reports that the High Court has reversed the ban have been countered by the company which announced that the restrictions on their operations have not been lifted.
In clarifying the situation, Golix announced that it was granted an interim relief by the court, but its accounts are still restricted even as an appeal is ongoing in the court. The statement said that on the 11th of May, āthe RBZ issued a circular to all the banks instructing them to close all of our bank accounts,ā however, a ā60-day windowā was given to the exchange. On the 15th of May, Golix āissued a statement to [their] customersā informing customers that the company was āaware of the directiveā and had āstarted the process of engaging the RBZā to discuss and address the central bankās concerns.
The statement continues that the Reserve bank of Zimbabwe responded with a letter on 17th of May ordering the exchange to ācease all operations immediatelyā. The following day, the exchangeās bank accounts were all closed. The exchange sought redress by filing an urgent chamber redress on the 21st of May requesting the High Court to lift the ban on the companyās accounts.
The Golix statement said that, on the 24th of May, āthe High Court granted Golix an interim relief that lifts the ban on cryptocurrencies by the Central Bank.ā Despite comprising positive news, the exchange states that āThe interim relief does not guarantee that we will get our bank accounts reopened.ā
The company said that they can only be assured that their accounts will be reopened after the outcome of its suit. The spokesperson said they were not willing to discuss the suit since it contravenes court rules.
It however made appeals to customers not to pay into their accounts due to the ban, explaining the scenario,
āPlease do not make any deposits into Golix until we have announced that we have resumed trading. If you try to deposit funds to our bank accounts right now, it may take weeks before we are able to recover those funds because, unless we tell the bank in advance, those funds will go straight to a suspense account.ā
Golix said it had initiated a separate discussion with the banks to enable gradual withdrawal of customersā deposit and enjoined its clients to apply for withdrawals from Mondays to Wednesday to enable processes that could have the funds released to them on Fridays. āWe recommend that you initiate a withdrawal of your crypto and/or fiat funds right now until we recommend that we have resumed trading.ā the statement continued.
As the legal battle raged, the exchange has set its sight on a broader African market having planned an initial coin offering to raise $32 million from token sale. On Friday, the spokesperson, Nhlalwenhle Ngwenya, speaking on the upcoming ICO said, āZimbabweās digital currencies pioneer, Golix is raising $32 million through a token sale in, a bid to finance cryptocurrencies infrastructure across the entire African continentā
