The rapid digitalisation of African financial services has expanded the attack surface for cybercriminals. The Africa Cybersecurity Report 2023 estimates African organisations lost $4 billion to cyber incidents, with financial services accounting for 40 percent of breaches. Nigeria's Financial Institutions Training Centre reports that Nigerian banks collectively lost N15 billion to fraud in 2023, with business email compromise, SIM swap fraud, and ATM skimming as the leading vectors. Kenya's Central Bank responded to a major bank cyber incident in 2023 by issuing mandatory Cybersecurity Guidance.

Regulatory Frameworks

South Africa's SARB issued Guidance Note 3/2021 on cybersecurity risk management. The CBN published the Risk-Based Cybersecurity Framework in 2022, requiring Nigerian banks to conduct annual penetration testing, implement SOC monitoring, and report cyber incidents within 24 hours. The African Union Convention on Cyber Security and Personal Data Protection (Malabo Convention) provides a framework for cross-border cyber incident response, though only 13 AU member states have ratified it. Cybersecurity firms and financial institutions managing African digital risk can access compliance guidance and vendor contacts on intra-africa.com.

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