Discover Qazaqstan via News and Inspiring Stories
  1. Main Page
  2. News
  3. Kazakh Banks Get Strict With Payment Card Issuance To Russians
  1. News
  2. News
Astana, Kazakhstan • 26 May, 2022 | 13:10
2 min read

Kazakh Banks Get Strict With Payment Card Issuance To Russians

Russians will have to provide proof of residency or a work permit

tass.ru
tass.ru

Kazakh banks have started to tighten procedures for issuing payment cards to Russian citizens amid sanctions imposed on financial institutions across Russia over Moscow’s unprovoked invasion of Ukraine, Radio Free Europe/ Radio Liberty's Kazakh Service reports.

Identification number

Since Russia launched its war against Ukraine on February 24, banks in Kazakhstan have been flooded by tens of thousands of Russian citizens seeking to open bank accounts and obtain Mastercard and VISA credit cards after the global payment giants suspended operations in Russia due to the sanctions, which have crippled international financial transactions in the country.

Because of the deluge of applications, some Kazakh banks have started requesting proof of permanent residence or work permits from Kazakh citizens for Russian citizens who want to set up accounts.

Media reports cited several bank officials as saying that the uncontrolled issuance of payment cards to Russian citizens may lead to Western sanctions against them.

Arlen Moldabekov, a top official at Kazakhstan’s central bank said on May 25 in a televised interview that, although local laws allow non-residents to open accounts at Kazakh banks, financial institutions have the right to request such documents from potential clients.

"When issuing payment cards, our banks follow legal requirements, as well as internal regulations and the requirements of the banks' compliance control systems. They also comply with the regulations of the international payments systems, of which they are members, and whose cards they issue." 

After VISA and Mastercard suspended their partnership with Russian banks in March, Russian citizens rushed in droves to Kazakhstan and other former Soviet republics seeking payment cards, among other things, at banks.

Last week, the Interior Ministry in Nur-Sultan said that 34,960 Russian citizens had obtained Kazakh Individual Identification Numbers (IIN) in the period between February 24 and May 17, while 606 Ukrainian nationals obtained Kazakh IINs during the same period.

An IIN allows individuals to get social benefits and simplifies the process of opening bank accounts in Kazakhstan. 

Only 30% of an article published on The Qazaqstan Monitor website may be used with a mandatory hyperlink provided to indicate the original source. To re-publish the full article, written permission from the editorial is required.