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Dubai crypto regulator suspends BitOasis crypto exchange license

BitOasis was the first crypto exchange to get an operational license in Dubai, which has now been suspended by the local regulator for not meeting key conditions in time.

Dubai’s cryptocurrency regulator has suspended the license of crypto exchange BitOasis for not meeting mandated conditions within the timeframes set out by the authority.

On July 10, the Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (VARA) issued two alerts saying its undertaken enforcement action against BitOasis and is reviewing the Dubai-based firm.

VARA said BitOasis’ conditional license, granted April 12, permitted it to operate provided the firm met “key conditions over 30-60 day timeframes” which the regulator said hadn’t been met.

VARA did not detail what conditions BitOasis failed to meet, but until it can fulfill the conditions the firm's “Licence for Institutional and Qualified Retail Investors remains ‘non-operational,’” according to the regulator.

BitOasis received the first of the city’s “minimum viable product operational licenses” from VARA allowing it to provide broker-dealer services to Dubai’s qualified institutional and retail investors according to a May blog post.

The license is the last of a multi-step process before a Full Market Product (FMP) license is issued. Currently, VARA has not issued an FMP license to any firm.

BitOasis will have to meet the conditions set out in its current license in order to apply for the FMP license, VARA explained.

Related: UAE emerges as a pro-Bitcoin mining destination in the Middle East

VARA’s latest action comes after its April reprimand of Su Zhu and Kyle Davies — the co-founders of the collapsed crypto hedge fund Three Arrows Capital.

The pair landed on VARA’s radar for operating and promoting their new OPNX crypto exchange in Dubai without the required license.

For BitOasis, VARA said it would “continue to monitor the situation for regulatory compliance remediation.”

Cointelegraph contacted BitOasis and VARA for comment but did not immediately receive a response.

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Middle East, Asia and Africa blockchain association launches in Abu Dhabi

A new blockchain body has been launched with the backing of industry leaders in the Middle East region including figures from Binance, Crypto.com and the largest crypto exchange in the region.

A new blockchain and cryptocurrency-focused association has been launched within Abu Dhabi’s free economic zone that aims to further the development of blockchain and crypto ecosystems across the Middle Eastern, North Africa, and Asian regions.

The Middle East, Africa & Asia Crypto & Blockchain Association (MEAACBA) was officially launched on Nov. 8 in the Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM), a free economic zone based in the center of the city subject to its own set of civil and commercial laws. The zone was designed to further the growth of fintech companies in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

The nonprofit organization will aim to facilitate regulatory solutions, create commercial opportunities and invest in education to support industry growth, according to its website.

The association will be spearheaded by board chairman Jehanzeb Awan, founder of an international risk and compliance consulting firm headquartered in Dubai.

Other supporting the association include Binance’s regional head of Middle East and North Africa (MENA), Richard Teng, Crypto.com’s general manager of Middle East and Africa, Stuart Isted, and Ola Doudin, the CEO of BitOasis, a cryptocurrency exchange in the region.

Awan said he hopes the organization will bring about a collaborative and community-based approach to further industry growth in the MENA region and “create wide-reaching benefits for this highly dynamic and exciting space.”

“The industry will benefit from the Association as it provides a coordination mechanism between regulators, government agencies, banks, legal, tax, and advisory firms to address the most pressing challenges,” he added.

ADGM’s chairman Ahmed Jasim Al Zaabi also stated that MEAACBA’s addition would contribute to a much more “progressive financial sector” in the region.

Related: UAE Web3 ecosystem houses almost 1.5K active organizations: Report

MEAACBA’s launch comes as the Financial Services Regulatory Authority (FSRA) — the financial regulator of ADGM’s free economic zone — published a set of “Guiding Principles” on its approach to navigate the regulatory complexities brought to it by the digital asset industry in September.

The principles are said to be “crypto-friendly” while still complying with some of the strict international standards on Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Counter-Terrorism Financing (CFT) by the United Nations.

The MENA region is also the fastest-growing cryptocurrency market in the world, according to a recent study. During a 12-month stretch from July 2021 and June 2022, transaction volume in MENA reached $566 billion, an increase of 48% from the previous 12 months.

The use case for cryptocurrencies in many of these emerging markets has come in the form of savings preservation and remittance payments to counter the effects of inflation in highly unstable economies.

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Blockchain.com partners with Visa to offer crypto debit card

The launch of the new crypto debit card follows the announcement of similar products from FTX and BitOasis.

Crypto exchange Blockchain.com has partnered with Visa to launch a crypto card, available to only U.S. residents initially, which allows users to pay using their crypto or cash balance wherever Visa debit cards are accepted.

In an Oct. 26 announcement, Blockchain.com revealed that there would be no sign-up or annual fees, no transaction fees, and users would earn 1% of all purchases back in crypto.

In a Yahoo Finance interview, Blockchain.com CEO Peter Smith said the card already had 50,000 signed onto a waiting list, noting:

“There’s still a lot of demand for crypto products, but you’re seeing that demand shift away from trading and more towards folks that are interested in using DeFi, using their balances.”

Following the announcement, Visa’s head of crypto, Cuy Sheffield, pointed out that worldwide acceptance is necessary for crypto adoption to continue to grow.

The card is powered by California-based payments company Marqeta, which helped develop crypto finance firm Swipe’s crypto visa card in September 2020.

The announcement follows news that Visa has partnered with crypto exchange FTX to roll out a debit card to 40 countries on October 7.

Related: Japan’s International Payments System will test plastic cards for CBDC

MasterCard partners with BitOasis

On Oct. 25, Visa’s main competitor Mastercard signed onto a strategic partnership with BitOasis, the leading crypto platform in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), to launch a series of crypto card programs designed to facilitate the adoption of digital assets in the region.

BitOasis customers will be able to link their wallets to the new card and convert crypto into fiat to enable the use of Mastercard’s global merchant network, with the card expected to launch in early 2023.

The co-founder and CEO of BitOasis, Ola Doudin, sees a huge potential for adoption within the area, noting:

“We continue to witness sustained demand amongst our customers for crypto to be integrated into, and relevant, for their daily lives. Research tells us that 47% of the Middle East population now believe crypto is the future of money.”

The partnership follows a $30 million Series B funding round from BitOasis which closed in October 2021. The funding facilitated the expansion of its Dubai-based platform into MENA.

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UAE-Based Crypto Exchange Bitoasis Obtains Provisional Approval From Dubai’s New Regulator

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