Demystifying Banking Law in Mauritius: knowing the extent of rights of private clients
Description
The course is designed to accept that a good understanding of the legal framework that arises in banking can uphold sound banking practice; for the bank; the regulator and the customer. By delving into the topics designated, the aim is to achieve greater confidence in accepting the interrelationship that arises for a banking professional and the applicable laws.
Course Content
- Reviewing the body of laws available in the current finance landscape; (from bank’s perspective; and from private client’s perspective)
- What does a private client seek in a bank: what laws can he have recourse to
- Judicial treatment of banks in Mauritius
- Understanding the overall duty of the bank and of its obligations
- Confidentiality vs duty of disclosure: the AML/CFT dimension
- The current legal landscape and considering the bank’s conduct in an evolving digital climate
- Case study: Afrasia v Stanford Asset Holdings Ltd: what went wrong?
- Practical scenario- dealing with a disgruntled private client
MQA Approval/HRDC Refund: Yes
CPD Points: 3
Price: MUR 10,000
Delivery Mode: Face to Face
Duration: 3 Hours
Speakers
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Nikhil BoolellBarrister at Temple Law – Partner / DirectorNikhil specialises in Civil and Commercial Dispute Resolution and aspects of contentious work with particular focus on company, employment, insurance and administrative law. He has wide ranging experience before the Courts and Tribunals in Mauritius, and has appeared unled at all judicial levels in Mauritius until the Supreme Court acting in its Appellate jurisdiction. He is instructed to act in commercial claims for both claimants and defendants. Since coming to the employed bar, Nikhil regularly appears together with, and works on matters with both Silk from the law firm.
Outside of his litigation time, Nikhil’s practice is balanced in favour of a strong advisory and corporate time allotment. He habitually spends most of his out of court time dispensing advice to the Board of foreign and domestic companies, foreign states and individuals on their activities or business in Mauritius.
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Zakariyya SeekdaurBarrister at Temple LawZakariyya joined Temple Law as a Barrister at Law in November 2023. He advises clients and offers legal representation in a variety of civil and employment-related matters. Zakariyya appears regularly before the District and Intermediate Court of Mauritius as well as the Family Division of the Supreme Court of Mauritius.
He regularly assists Counsels on Civil, Commercial and Employment related matters. He has experience appearing for employers in labour disputes before the Commission and Conciliation for Mediation and the Employment Relations Tribunal. In addition, Zakariyya conducts on a regular basis disciplinary committee hearings for a diverse portfolio of clients.