Ivorian fintech firm CinetPay is under investigation by Senegalese authorities for its alleged role in facilitating money laundering, organised fraud, and illegal online gambling, per multiple reports..
The probe presents a significant challenge for the regional central bank, which recently licensed the company, and casts a spotlight on governance concerns within West Africa’s rapidly expanding fintech sector.
Senegal’s Special Cybersecurity Division (DSC) arrested CinetPay’s business development manager in Dakar, a Mr. Faye, as part of the investigation. The inquiry was initially launched after individuals reported harassment from entities posing as loan companies.
Authorities allege that fraudsters, using names like “Prontopaiement” and “Leviet Bank,” pressured victims to repay non-existent micro-loans. Investigators tracing the flow of funds found money was routed through CinetPay’s platform to a company in Côte d’Ivoire called Nectar Microcrédit Technologie.
During a search of CinetPay’s Dakar office, police uncovered a registration document for Sunutech Ltd Sarl, which operated as Seyp Senegal. That entity is accused of operating a Ponzi-like scheme that allegedly defrauded Senegalese citizens of over 10 billion CFA francs (~USD 15.4 M). Technical analysis indicated CinetPay processed payments for this scheme throughout 2024, police said.
Authorities also found a formal notice from Senegal’s national lottery, Lonase, accusing CinetPay of processing payments for unlicensed international gambling sites, including 1Win, Betwinner, and Melbet.
CinetPay, which received a payment institution licence from the Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO) earlier this year, has not issued a public statement. The company, backed by investors including Nigeria’s Flutterwave, is yet to issue a statement.
The case emerges as the BCEAO accelerates the licensing of payment firms across the West African Economic and Monetary Union (WAEMU). The bank has nearly doubled the number of licensed institutions in three months, part of a push to formalise the sector by a August 2025 deadline. Licensed firms gain access to a new regional instant payment system, a key infrastructure project.
The investigation into a newly licensed firm puts the central bank’s vetting process under scrutiny and highlights recurring governance issues in the region’s tech sector. The case follows recent fraud scandals at Senegalese payment aggregator Intech Group and state digital agency Sénégal Numérique SA, where insiders allegedly exploited weak internal controls.
Editor’s note (Sept 15, 2025):
After publication of this article, CinetPay issued a statement in response to reports of the investigation. The company said it is not implicated in any illegal activities, and that a third-party merchant misused its services, prompting the probe.
CinetPay stated that it terminated its contract with the merchant, is cooperating fully with authorities, and has filed a complaint with the Public Prosecutor against the company involved. It added that the staff questioned by authorities were commercial collaborators without executive or decision-making roles.
The company reaffirmed its commitment to regulatory compliance and financial inclusion, and said it is seeking additional licenses in the region to strengthen trust in its services.