Reports coming in suggest Ghanaian fintech entrepreneur founder of Zeepay, Andrew Takyi-Appiah is facing renewed scrutiny after Zeemoney Barbados Limited shut down operations following enforcement action by the Central Bank of Barbados.
The information gathered suggests the Central Bank of Barbados suspended Zeemoney Barbados Limited’s license in May 2026 over concerns about financial condition, governance, and regulatory compliance, leading to voluntary wind-up.
Andrew Takyi-Appiah’s Zeemoney, focused on remittances and mobile money services across four Barbados locations, is a Caribbean expansion of Ghanaian fintech Zeepay.
The recent event in Barbados has now intensified scrutiny on Takyi-Appiah amid a simultaneous High Court in Ghana creditor petition seeking to wind up Zeepay over an alleged unpaid US$1.22 million debt from a 2024 foreign exchange agreement.
A news article by NorvanReports detailed, “Ghanaian fintech entrepreneur Andrew Takyi-Appiah is facing renewed scrutiny after Zeemoney Barbados Limited, a money transfer company he headed in the Caribbean, shut down operations following enforcement action by the Central Bank of Barbados.
The development comes at a delicate time for Zeepay Ghana Limited, the Ghanaian fintech company founded by Takyi-Appiah, which is already facing a creditor’s petition at the Commercial Division of the High Court in Accra seeking its official winding up over an alleged unpaid debt of US$1,223,250.
According to Barbados Today, Zeemoney Barbados Limited, a fintech company used by Barbadians and foreign nationals to transfer money, has shut down its operations after the Central Bank of Barbados suspended its licence from May 5 to June 4, 2026. The report identified Andrew Takyi-Appiah as Chief Executive Officer of Zeemoney Barbados Limited.
The Central Bank’s action barred Zeemoney from conducting money or value transmission services during the suspension period. According to the regulator, the action followed a supervisory review and subsequent developments that “materially deepened” concerns regarding the company’s financial condition, governance, operational continuity and regulatory compliance.
At the end of the suspension period, Zeemoney did not resume operations. Instead, the company applied to the Central Bank of Barbados for approval to voluntarily wind up its operations, saying it would work with the regulator to ensure the process was carried out in an orderly manner and inform customers how to access their funds in due course.
Zeemoney reportedly operated four locations in Barbados, including its headquarters at Dome Mall in Warrens and branches in Speightstown, Hastings and Sheraton Mall Annex.
The company was involved in international remittances, mobile money and digital transfers, wallet and payment services, and transfer termination into bank accounts, debit cards and mobile wallets.
Barbados Today described Zeemoney as appearing to be part of Zeepay’s broader expansion into the Caribbean. The report also described Takyi-Appiah as a Ghanaian fintech entrepreneur who founded Zeepay in 2015, one of Africa’s major cross-border mobile money and remittance companies.
The Barbados development is significant because it comes while Zeepay Ghana is facing a serious court action in Ghana.
As earlier reported by NorvanReports, Obsidian Achernar Limited has filed a creditor’s petition seeking to wind up Zeepay Ghana Limited over an alleged unpaid debt of US$1,223,250.
According to the petition filed at the High Court Commercial Division in Accra, Obsidian Achernar and Zeepay entered into a foreign exchange agreement on or about June 4, 2024, under which the petitioner agreed to provide foreign exchange services and working capital support to Zeepay.
The petitioner alleges that Zeepay became indebted to it in the aggregate sum of US$2,446,500 and GHS 567,085.72.
The alleged debt, according to the petition, is an amount US$1,621,500 in respect of the working capital support, comprising a short-term credit line, and GHS 502,262 as outstanding payment in respect of excess cedi transfers made into Zeepay’s account.
Obsidian Achernar claims that Zeepay later proposed to settle the debt in two instalments. The first payment of US$1,223,250 was to be made no later than March 31, 2025, while the second and final payment of another US$1,223,250, together with a cedi payment of GHS 546,000, was to be made no later than April 30, 2025.
According to the petition, Zeepay made the first dollar payment and later settled the Ghana cedi component. However, Obsidian Achernar alleges that the second dollar payment of US$1,223,250 remains unpaid.
The petition also refers to an email communication dated May 7, 2025, in which Andrew Takyi-Appiah, described in the court filing as Zeepay’s Managing Director, allegedly promised to clear the cedi component before the end of May 2025.
Obsidian Achernar argues that while the cedi component was eventually paid, Zeepay made no mention of the outstanding dollar component and took no steps to settle it.
The petitioner claims it served a final letter before action and statutory demand on Zeepay on February 16, 2026, demanding payment within seven days and warning that legal proceedings, including winding-up proceedings, would be commenced if payment was not made.
The claims in the Ghana case remain allegations before the court, and Zeepay Ghana will have the opportunity to respond.
Still, the simultaneous pressure in Ghana and Barbados raises broader questions about governance, liquidity, regulatory compliance and operational resilience in cross-border fintech operations linked to Takyi-Appiah’s business interests.
The Central Bank of Barbados did not cite the Ghana court petition as a basis for its action against Zeemoney. Its stated concerns related specifically to Zeemoney Barbados and covered financial condition, governance, operational continuity and regulatory compliance.
But the overlap in leadership, the nature of the businesses and the timing of the two developments are difficult to ignore.
For fintech and remittance companies, trust is the foundation of the business model. Customers hand over money because they expect funds to move securely and promptly. Regulators issue licences because they expect strong governance, proper controls, financial soundness and continuity planning. Counterparties enter transactions because they expect obligations to be honoured.
When a regulator in one jurisdiction suspends a money transfer company over concerns about financial condition, governance, compliance and operational continuity, while a related Ghanaian fintech brand faces a creditor’s winding-up petition over an alleged unpaid dollar debt, the market is entitled to ask hard questions.
Are governance structures keeping pace with cross-border expansion? Are liquidity and foreign exchange obligations being prudently managed? Are subsidiaries adequately supervised? Are customers and counterparties protected when pressure emerges in one market? And how transparent are the corporate links between affiliated fintech entities operating across jurisdictions?
These questions do not amount to findings of wrongdoing. But they go to the heart of public confidence in financial technology companies handling cross-border payments and remittances.
The promise of African fintech remains powerful. It is built on faster transfers, cheaper remittances, digital inclusion and deeper connections between Africa and its diaspora.
But the Zeepay-Zeemoney developments show that growth alone is not enough.
In financial services, expansion must be matched by governance. Innovation must be matched by compliance. And ambition must be matched by the ability to protect customers, honour obligations and satisfy regulators in every jurisdiction where a company operates. For Zeemoney Barbados, the next step is an orderly wind-up under regulatory supervision.
For Zeepay Ghana, the immediate issue is the Accra court process. For Andrew Takyi-Appiah, the bigger challenge is restoring confidence in the wider fintech story he has helped build at a time when both regulators and creditors are asking tougher questions”.
See the post below:
Breaking: Zeemoney Shutdown in Barbados Deepens Scrutiny of Zeepay Founder https://t.co/OtjNKNYfyo #norvanreports @thePOE_T @Joe_Jackson_GH @norvan986 @StockmanNigeria @Centre4EconsSvy @BBSimons @myzeepay
— NorvanReports (@NorvanReports) June 9, 2026

