A group of pensioners from Standard Chartered Bank Kenya has threatened to seek the imprisonment of the bank’s top executives, escalating a bitter and long-running dispute over pension benefits. The pensioners, who refer to themselves as the “non-629 members,” have issued a seven-day ultimatum to the bank and the trustees of its pension fund, demanding compliance with recent court rulings.
The conflict stems from a landmark Supreme Court decision delivered on September 5, 2025. The court upheld rulings from the Retirement Benefits Tribunal, the High Court, and the Court of Appeal, which found that the bank had unlawfully applied incorrect actuarial factors when it transitioned its pension scheme from a Defined Benefit to a Defined Contribution plan on January 1, 1999. The Supreme Court emphasized that the matter was of “profound public interest,” touching on the rights of pensioners and the integrity of Kenya’s pension system.
The current crisis arises from the bank’s interpretation of this ruling. While the bank has acknowledged the judgment concerning the specific 629 pensioners who were parties to the original case, it has so far excluded a larger group of pensioners who underwent the same transition in 1999. The non-629 group argues that the bank’s selective application of the court’s decision constitutes discrimination and a contempt of judicial authority. They assert that the fundamental finding of unlawful action by the bank applies universally to all affected members of the pension fund.
In a detailed press statement, the group laid out specific contempt allegations against senior officials. They allege that the Chief Executive Officer bears ultimate responsibility for the bank’s non-compliance. The Chief Financial Officer is accused of failing to account for the full pension liability, thereby misleading regulators and investors. The Chief Risk Officer is cited for failing to identify the associated compliance risks.
A particularly sharp allegation is directed at the bank’s Head of Legal, who is accused of acting contemptuously by sending a letter on August 19, 2025, which stated that the non-629 members would receive nothing regardless of the Supreme Court’s decision and threatened them with legal costs before the ruling was even issued. The Board of Directors and the Trustees of the Pension Fund are collectively accused of authorizing actions that disregard the courts and fail in their fiduciary duties.
The pensioners have presented a list of demands to “purge the contempt.” These include undertaking a full independent valuation of the pension schemes as of 1999, issuing corrected public communications acknowledging the rights of all members, recalculating pension balances with all accrued interest, and convening a meeting with members to explain an implementation plan.
The group has given the bank and trustees seven days to comply. Failure to do so, they warn, will result in an application to the High Court to have the named officials committed to civil jail and/or fined. They also vow to seek full indemnity costs against the individuals personally.
As of the time of publishing, Standard Chartered Bank Kenya had not issued a public response to these specific allegations and the threatened legal action.