The National Bank of Rwanda (BNR) publicly warned citizens against using the Rwandan Franc (FRW) for crypto transactions, two days after global exchange Bybit listed FRW on its peer-to-peer (P2P) platform without regulatory clearance.
The BNR highlighted Bybit’s promotional announcement, stating that crypto-assets remain unauthorized for payments, FRW conversion, or P2P trading under current law.
Why Bybit’s Timing Could Not Have Been Worse
Rwanda has maintained a restrictive stance on private crypto since 2018, when the BNR first declared cryptocurrencies illegal for domestic use.
That position has shifted gradually. In March 2025, the BNR and the Capital Markets Authority (CMA) released a draft framework to regulate Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASPs).
The bill explicitly prohibits crypto as legal tender, bans crypto mining and mixers, and bars tokens pegged to the FRW.
On March 4, 2026, Rwanda’s Cabinet approved a comprehensive version of that bill. The Chamber of Deputies passed its general principles on March 31. Committee review continues.
Bybit launched its FRW P2P feature on April 2, just two days later, offering new-user rewards and bi-weekly merchant commissions.
Its announcement made no mention of local regulatory approval. Community members also flagged that promotional materials featured an outdated Rwandan national emblem.
A Direct Challenge to Rwanda’s CBDC Plans
The BNR is piloting its own Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC), the e-FRW, following a proof-of-concept completed in February 2026. A 12-month domestic pilot is underway before international cross-border testing begins.
Unregulated foreign platforms attaching the FRW to crypto markets risk undermining that effort and eroding public trust in the currency.
The CMA has also cited pressure from the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) over crypto-linked money laundering as a core reason for formal regulation.
What Comes Next
Under the draft law, unlicensed VASP operators in Rwanda face fines up to 30 million FRW, roughly $21,000, and up to five years in prison.
Bybit has not publicly responded to the BNR’s warning. Binance and Remitano have offered FRW P2P pairs for years without triggering comparable pushback, suggesting Bybit’s loud promotional approach crossed a regulatory threshold.
Whether Bybit removes FRW voluntarily or waits for formal enforcement may set a precedent for every foreign exchange eyeing East Africa.
The post Bybit Crosses a Line in Rwanda That Binance Has Walked for Years Without Consequence appeared first on BeInCrypto.
Source: https://beincrypto.com/bybit-rwandan-franc-listing-central-bank-warning/




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