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Islamic banking in Africa: Gulf actors follow different paths

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Discussing Islamic banking's growth in Africa, Saudi Arabia is also playing an important role

Backed by Gulf-based financial actors, Islamic finance is gaining ground in Africa. Commercial banks embedded in local economies and development institutions focused on sovereign borrowers and public policy are ruling the roost.

Commercial Islamic banks operate as normal market-based financial institutions. However, their operational framework, compliant with Sharia principles, sets these entities apart from the non-Islamic segment. These values prohibit the interest payment, also known as riba, and outlaw purely speculative transactions.

Besides these contractual obligations, Islamic banks finance the same needs (SMEs, trade, housing, equipment and imports) as their conventional counterparts. Financing gets structured around contracts anchored in the real economy, such as Murabaha (cost-plus financing that avoids interest-based lending), Ijara (leasing arrangement), or Musharaka (risk- and profit-sharing partnership).

Also, Islamic banking is gaining prominence in Africa. UAE-based Dubai Islamic Bank (DIB) made the first move in 2022. Through its subsidiary “DIB Bank Kenya,” the venture announced the opening of a branch in Nairobi’s business district to strengthen SME financing and facilitate trade flows between Kenya and the UAE. DIB’s strategy has been to capitalize on the East African country’s growing economic hubs.

In Egypt, Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank (ADIB) has taken a different approach, by consolidating its longer-established and deeply rooted presence further. ADIB’s growing prominence in Egypt also makes the North African major a key entry point for other Gulf-based commercial Islamic financial entities, which combine elements such as retail banking, corporate financing and capital market operations in their product offerings.

However, alongside the expansion of Gulf banks, there is also evidence of a less obvious but equally significant phenomenon: the development of African players to dominate the sharia-compliant market while using the Gulf as a springboard to raise their profile.

Nyla Bank, a Ghanaian fintech described as a pan-African digital Islamic bank project, was selected as a semi-finalist in the Milken Motsepe Prize in FinTech in 2024 and is set to make a presentation at the Middle East and Africa summit organised by the Milken Institute in Abu Dhabi. This, therefore, also suggests that the sector’s development is being driven by African players with ties to the Gulf.

Apart from physical networks, some transactions evidence the increasing incorporation of commercial Islamic banks into African financing circuits, especially regarding syndicated murabaha operations and capital markets interventions. The aforementioned operations evidence a gradual, though targeted, level of integration into African economies. The commercial dimension is complemented by the second pillar of Islamic finance in Africa: development institutions.

Discussing Islamic banking’s growth in Africa, Saudi Arabia is also playing an important role. Jeddah-based Islamic Development Bank has now emerged as a dominant force for multilateral Islamic financing on the continent. Its operations focus on public projects, trade finance and risk mitigation, going well beyond traditional banking activities.

Meanwhile, Kuwait has largely concentrated its Islamic banking activities in North Africa, with Egypt emerging as the primary hub. Kuwait Finance House also enhanced its presence in 2025 by changing the name of Ahli United Bank Egypt to “KFH Egypt.” KFH Egypt is an entity that is fully sharia-compliant and has a considerable branch network. This is in addition to capital markets; an example is the issuance of sovereign sukuk with the involvement of KFH.

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