Vavada Banner
BTC $74,026.00 (+3.47%)
ETH $2,264.22 (+7.74%)
BNB $684.62 (+3.90%)
XRP $1.48 (+4.41%)
SOL $93.50 (+5.99%)
TRX $0.30 (+0.53%)
DOGE $0.10 (+4.83%)
ADA $0.28 (+6.74%)
BCH $472.48 (+1.52%)
HYPE $38.02 (+0.15%)
LEO $9.07 (+0.01%)
LINK $9.79 (+6.36%)
XMR $362.38 (+1.55%)
CC $0.15 (-0.31%)
XLM $0.17 (+2.24%)
AVAX $10.40 (+7.18%)
LTC $57.02 (+3.22%)
RAIN $0.01 (+0.18%)
HBAR $0.10 (+2.87%)
SUI $1.05 (+4.24%)

Botswana vs Iraq

Crypto regulation comparison

Botswana

Botswana

Iraq

Iraq

Legal
Banned

Botswana passed the Virtual Assets Act in 2022, first African country to issue crypto licenses. NBFIRA supervises VASPs. 4 licensed entities as of 2024. Penalties up to P250,000 or 5 years imprisonment.

Iraq has banned cryptocurrency dealings. The Central Bank of Iraq issued a directive in 2017 prohibiting banks, financial institutions, and exchange companies from dealing in cryptocurrency. Despite the ban, some underground and peer-to-peer crypto trading reportedly persists.

Tax Type None
Tax Type Unclear
Tax Rate N/A
Tax Rate N/A
Exchanges Yes Yes
Exchanges No No
Mining Yes Yes
Mining No No
Regulator Non-Bank Financial Institutions Regulatory Authority (NBFIRA)
Regulator CBI (Central Bank of Iraq)
Stablecoin Rules No stablecoin regulation
Stablecoin Rules Not applicable; crypto activities prohibited
Key Points
  • Virtual Assets Act enacted in 2022, effective Feb 22, 2022
  • First African country to issue crypto licenses via NBFIRA
  • 4 licensed VASPs as of December 2024
  • Bank of Botswana assesses domestic crypto risks as minimal
  • Unregistered crypto dealers face fines up to P250,000 or imprisonment
Key Points
  • CBI banned all crypto dealings by financial institutions in 2017
  • Exchange companies are prohibited from handling cryptocurrency
  • No regulatory framework for crypto businesses
  • Underground and P2P crypto trading reportedly exists despite the ban
  • The ban is motivated by AML concerns and financial stability considerations