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The Joshua Oigara KCB File: Inside the Billion-Shilling Scandals and Political Tides That Rocked East Africa’s Largest Bank

Joshua Oigara, the former high-flying Group Chief Executive Officer of the Kenya Commercial Bank (KCB) Group, stunned the corporate world when his exit was abruptly moved forward by seven months.

Under the leadership of Joshua Oigara, KCB had ballooned into an undisputed financial empire.

Yet, when the bank’s board suddenly announced in May 2022 that he would vacate his C-suite office immediately, to be replaced by National Bank of Kenya managing director Paul Russo.

It triggered a scramble for answers across Nairobi’s corporate corridors. Was this a seamless transition, or did a series of multi-billion-shilling regulatory and political storms finally break his ironclad grip on East Africa’s leading retail bank?

The Two Faces of an Empire: Unprecedented Growth vs. Looming Shadows

To unpack this exposé, one must first look at the sheer weight of what Oigara built. During his nine-year tenure at the helm of KCB Group, the bank’s public financial metrics read like a masterclass in corporate triumph:

  • Profit Before Tax: Surged from Sh20.1 billion in 2013 to Sh47 billion in 2021.

  • Total Income: More than doubled, shattering expectations by climbing from Sh47 billion to Sh109 billion.

  • Shareholder Equity: Tripled from Sh63 billion to Sh171.7 billion.

As one of Kenya’s highest-remunerated executives commanding up to Sh22 million a month in salary, bonuses, and allowances, Oigara’s legacy seemed firmly secured in stone.

However, beneath this golden veneer lay an operational timeline marked by severe compliance failures, international money-laundering allegations, and intense backroom political friction.

Uncovering the Ledgers: A Timeline of Institutional Scandals

While the Central Bank of Kenya’s (CBK) directorate of bank supervision officially audited and dismissed separate whistleblower allegations concerning irregular executive bonus structures, other crises under Oigara’s watch were far more concrete.

The National Youth Service (NYS) Cash Trail

The most legally damaging domestic crisis under Oigara’s leadership involved the high-profile National Youth Service fraud saga.

Central Bank and regulatory investigations exposed that KCB was a primary vehicle among five Tier-1 commercial banks that handled a massive Sh3.5 billion stolen directly from the state agency.

To insulate Oigara and other top executives from potentially catastrophic criminal prosecution, KCB was forced into a rare defensive manoeuvre: a formal Deferred Prosecution Agreement (DPA) with the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (ODPP).

The CBK Crackdown
2018

The Central Bank of Kenya slams KCB with a Sh149.5 million fine for severe anti-money laundering compliance failures after the bank processed Sh639 million linked to NYS suspects.

The Prosecution Shield
2020

KCB joins four other lenders to pay a combined settlement of Sh385 million to the ODPP in lieu of criminal prosecution, effectively buying legal immunity for its executive leadership.

The South Sudan Laundering Dossier

The regulatory breaches expanded far beyond Kenya’s borders. In 2016 and 2021, investigative dossiers published by The Sentry, a Washington-based investigative organisation, directly implicated KCB’s regional operations in moving illicit wealth out of war-torn South Sudan.

According to banking documents cited in The Sentry’s landmark report, “War Crimes Shouldn’t Pay”, high-ranking South Sudanese military generals effortlessly moved millions of dollars through their personal bank accounts at KCB. This included:

  • Over $3.03 million flowing directly through the personal KCB account of General Reuben Riak.

  • At least $367,000 was transferred to General Jok Riak’s personal account within a single ten-month window, sums that completely dwarfed their official annual government salaries of roughly $35,000.

Oigara aggressively defended the institution at the time, stating that KCB deployed global gold standards for Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Know-Your-Customer (KYC) protocols.

However, The Sentry’s subsequent 2021 follow-up report reiterated that Kenya remained a prime destination for illicit South Sudanese funds moved through local corporate structures and elite banking networks.

The Political Matrix and the Weston Hotel Collision

Beyond regulatory oversight, the shifting sands of Kenyan politics are widely believed by corporate insiders to have sealed the timing of Oigara’s sudden exit.

Under his watch, the bank found itself heavily exposed to highly politicised commercial matters, most notably its financial backing of the Weston Hotel, a luxury property owned by William Ruto (then the deputy president).

In 2015, KCB advanced a massive Sh1.2 billion loan to the hotel. When the Kenya Civil Aviation Authority (KCAA) launched a fierce legal battle to revoke the title deed of the land, claiming it was stolen public property, KCB actively joined the litigation to safeguard its financial interests.

The bank argued that cancelling the title would severely prejudice its position, putting the repayment of the multi-million-shilling facility at immediate risk.

While the credit facility was defended as a standard commercial transaction, corporate analysts note that close ties with Politically Exposed Persons (PEPs) often become a strategic liability during transitional political cycles.

Speculation remains intense that as the political environment shifted, certain power players uncomfortable with the bank’s perceived alignments forced the board to accelerate Oigara’s departure.

The Executive Epilogue

Despite the intense pressure and the abrupt nature of his KCB exit in May 2022, Joshua Oigara’s career did not falter.

In December 2022, he executed a flawless corporate pivot, landing as the CEO of Stanbic Bank Kenya and South Sudan, KCB’s direct market rival. His upward trajectory solidified even further; as of March 2026.

He serves as the Chief Executive and Director of Stanbic Holdings Plc, concurrently holding the role of Standard Bank Regional Chief Executive for East Africa, overseeing banking operations across six countries in the region.

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