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The High Court has declined to stop the order from President Uhuru Kenyatta suspending the blacklisting of defaulters with loans of less than Sh5 million and sharing data of borrowers negatively listed with credit reference bureaus (CRBs).

Justice James Makau rejected the push to suspend the order in a court fight that pitted the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) and the State against the CRBs whose operations have been hit after 99 percent of negatively listed accounts had their data frozen.

Data from the CRBs show that the bureaus can only share default data from less than 50,000 loan accounts of the 4.6 million blacklisted borrowers in the wake of the order from President Kenyatta.

This prompted the CRBs– TransUnion and Metropol– to join two traders in the suit that sought to force the CBK to reverse the order that suspended for one year a move to blacklist borrowers with non-performing loans of less than Sh5 million.

They argue the freeze on sharing data on loans of less than Sh5 million that were defaulted last year would stall lending to small and medium-sized businesses due to incomplete borrowers’ information.

The petitioners sought for the lifting of the CBK order barring unregulated digital mobile lenders like Tala and Branch from forwarding names of loan defaulters to CRBs and stopped the blacklisting of borrowers owing less than Sh1,000.