Gambling Firm Sakatabets Exposed Over Weak Self-Exclusion Enforcement
Newsroom 10 min read
Across Kenya’s fast-growing online betting sector, a pattern of complaints has kept surfacing from gamblers who say self-exclusion tools on several platforms do not act as immediate safety locks, but instead send users into customer care channels where restriction requests remain pending for long periods without a clear finish.
The matter is not tied to one player or one site.
It is being reported across multiple betting firms operating in the country, creating a wider picture that now draws attention to how responsible gambling tools function in practice compared to how they are presented inside betting apps.
At the centre of the latest wave of user reports is Sakatabets, a Kenyan online betting and gaming platform operated under Orctic Connections Limited.
Users say its self-exclusion function does not cut access at once when activated, but pushes the request into manual customer support processes that delay any restriction that should have taken effect immediately.
The issue is now being read alongside a broader problem within Kenya’s betting industry, where gamblers say similar experiences keep appearing across different platforms offering sports betting, virtual games, and crash-based products.
This comes at a time when Kenya is going through what public data and industry estimates describe as a severe betting expansion with major financial and social impact.
Kenya is now widely described as one of Africa’s most active gambling markets, with recent figures estimating that more than Ksh 766 billion was spent across betting platforms in 2024 alone.
Daily flows into betting firms are estimated at about Ksh 2.1 billion, with calculations suggesting that roughly Ksh 24,000 moves through gambling platforms every second. Estimates also show average monthly spending per gambler at about Ksh 1,865, even as a large share of users operate without stable incomes.
At a population level, participation rates are also high. Data suggests that about 40.4 percent of Kenyans aged between 18 and 45 are active in betting, while youth gambling participation in Kenya is said to be among the highest in Sub-Saharan Africa.
In some studies, nearly 10 million citizens are estimated to engage in gambling activity daily.
The pressure from that scale has created both economic and regulatory strain, with state agencies collecting more than Ksh 33 billion in tax revenue from the betting and gaming sector under tighter enforcement systems, while at the same time moving against operators with compliance failures.
A total of 185 firms have been marked for regulatory action in recent enforcement drives linked to licensing and operational conduct.
Amid this backdrop, Kenya is also going through a regulatory shift where oversight functions are moving from existing frameworks to the newly established Gambling Regulatory Authority of Kenya, commonly called GRA.
That transition is expected to reshape licensing, enforcement, and consumer protection across the industry at a time when complaints around responsible gambling tools are growing louder.
The self-exclusion complaints are also emerging against the backdrop of earlier user grievances involving Sakatabets.
In recent months, some customers have publicly raised complaints over delayed withdrawals, disputed payouts, and winnings that they claim failed to reach their mobile money accounts within expected timelines after successful bets had already been settled.
Sakatabets Self-Exclusion Requests Under Question ¶
Within this climate, gamblers say the self-exclusion process offered by platforms such as Sakatabets does not work as an immediate blocking mechanism.
Users describe a process where the self-exclusion option appears within account settings and can be activated through standard confirmation and identity checks.
But instead of ending access at once, the request is sent into customer care systems.
According to several user reports, support teams acknowledge the request and say action will follow, yet the betting profile remains active while communication continues.
Screenshots shared by users show system messages stating that the profile cannot be disabled at that moment and directing the user to contact support for help.
The concern is not only the delay.
It is the fact that access stays open during the period when the user has already taken the step to stop gambling.
A Manual Step in a Safety Tool ¶
At the heart of the complaint is the structure of how self-exclusion requests are handled.
Instead of immediate system-level enforcement, users say the process moves into a manual review path managed through customer service.
That creates a gap between user intent and system action, where betting access remains live while the request is processed outside the platform logic.
In practical terms, users report that the betting profile does not shut down at the moment self-exclusion is triggered, but remains open until customer support completes the process.
For a tool meant to act as a barrier, that delay is the main issue being raised.
The Same Story Across Other Betting Firms ¶
While Sakatabets is part of the current discussion, gamblers say similar experiences are being reported across other betting platforms in Kenya’s online gambling space.
Users describe repeated patterns where self-exclusion tools look functional on the screen but depend on customer support for the final step.
In several cases, gamblers say they wait for long periods between request submission and actual restriction, with no clear timeline given to them.
That has led to a wider belief among some users that self-exclusion tools across parts of the industry may not operate as immediate safeguards, but as delayed administrative steps.
The issue is now being viewed within the wider structure of Kenya’s betting market, where rapid transaction systems dominate user experience while safety tools appear to move at a slower pace.
Why Timing Matters ¶
Self-exclusion depends on speed.
Once a user decides to stop, the tool is supposed to block access at once. Any delay creates a window where the profile is still open even after the user has made a clear request to step away.
That gap is what users say defeats the purpose of the tool.
In betting systems built for speed, the safety side must move at the same pace. When deposits, wagers, and gaming access happen instantly, restriction must also happen instantly.
What is Sakatabets? ¶
Sakatabets operates as a digital sports betting and gaming platform offering football markets, virtual sports, and crash-based games such as Aviator and JetX.
The platform is built around mobile money transactions, allowing users to deposit and withdraw through digital payment rails and continue betting in real time.
Its structure reflects a wider trend in Kenya’s betting sector, where platforms are built for nonstop use through phones and web browsers.
Within that system, self-exclusion tools are meant to help users limit or stop access when needed.
But user complaints suggest a clear gap between how fast betting access works and how slow access restriction can be once self-exclusion is activated.
Responsible Gambling Tools Under Pressure ¶
Responsible gambling features such as deposit limits, cooling-off periods, and self-exclusion are standard requirements in licensed betting operations.
They are meant to give users control over their gambling activity and cut the risk of harm tied to prolonged betting.
Self-exclusion in particular is treated as a strong safeguard, meant to block access immediately when activated.
When execution is delayed or sent through manual support channels, the tool loses force, according to user reports.
That gap between activation and enforcement leaves users exposed to continued access even after they have asked to stop.
Regulatory Oversight and the New GRA Transition ¶
The Betting Control and Licensing Board remains the current regulatory authority overseeing Kenya’s betting industry, with responsibility for licensing operators and setting compliance rules for gambling platforms.
At the same time, regulatory functions are moving toward the newly established Gambling Regulatory Authority of Kenya, GRA, which is expected to take over broader oversight duties such as licensing enforcement, consumer protection, and responsible gambling systems.
That transition is taking place as complaints about self-exclusion and access control keep rising across the sector, placing more pressure on the system to ensure safety tools work as intended.
Questions are now being asked about how these tools are tested, enforced, and checked across licensed platforms.
Financial Scale and Social Impact ¶
Kenya’s betting market continues to expand at a scale that has drawn both economic attention and social alarm.
With estimates placing total annual gambling expenditure at Ksh 766 billion, the sector has become one of the country’s largest digital consumer markets.
Daily inflows of about Ksh 2.1 billion reflect constant activity across sports betting, virtual games, and instant play products, while per-second transaction estimates show the pace at which money moves through digital platforms.
At the same time, data showing that a large share of participants are young adults has intensified public discussion around gambling exposure and financial vulnerability.
In some urban and informal settlement areas, betting activity has been reported at very high frequency, adding to the worry around financial strain tied to gambling habits.
Clinical data cited in research settings has also pointed to high levels of gambling-related distress among people seeking mental health support, with many classified under severe gambling disorder levels.
Regulatory Response and Enforcement Pressure ¶
In response to the growth of the market, government agencies have moved to tighten control over betting operations and improve compliance.
The Kenya Revenue Authority has increased tax collection from the sector, with reported revenue above Ksh 33 billion under stronger enforcement systems.
At the same time, regulatory and ICT authorities have moved against unlicensed or non-compliant operators, with enforcement action affecting a large number of digital gambling firms.
New policy proposals under review have included changes to minimum betting stakes, a higher legal age threshold for participation, stricter digital identity checks, and tighter limits on advertising during daytime and evening hours.
These moves show stronger state involvement in handling the economic and social effects of gambling across the country.
Sakatabets Ownership and Operational Responsibility ¶
Within Sakatabets, operational responsibility sits with Orctic Connections Limited, the registered Kenyan entity behind the platform’s licensing and daily management structure under existing gaming rules.
The company maintains a formal operational and regulatory footprint within Kenya’s licensed digital services ecosystem, positioning it within the category of technology-driven service providers operating under structured oversight frameworks. Its operations extend beyond purely online activity, with a physical business presence recorded in Nairobi’s Westlands area where administrative and systems coordination functions are carried out.
Under its licensing obligations through the Betting Control and Licensing Board, Orctic Connections Limited is responsible for ensuring that platform features tied to user protection function in line with regulatory expectations. This includes systems for responsible gambling, transaction handling, and user account control mechanisms.
The regulatory environment around it is currently in transition as oversight functions move toward the Gambling Regulatory Authority of Kenya, GRA.
This shift is expected to introduce stricter expectations around automated enforcement of consumer protection tools, particularly in areas such as self-exclusion where real-time blocking is increasingly viewed as a core requirement rather than a secondary administrative function.
Within this evolving structure, responsibility for ensuring that system-level safeguards work instantly rests directly on the operator, especially where digital platforms are built for continuous, real-time gambling access.
Public Trust and Platform Credibility ¶
At the center of the discussion is a larger issue of trust between users and betting platforms.
For many users, the expectation is straightforward. When a self-exclusion request is activated, access should stop at once.
When that does not happen, confidence in the safety tool drops, especially in an environment where betting access is fast and continuous.
The gap between access speed and restriction speed has now become one of the main points of debate within the gambling community.
What Is Needed ¶
Across multiple complaints, users are asking for self-exclusion tools that work instantly without reliance on support intervention or long processing times.
The demand is for direct system-level blocking the moment the user activates the feature.
Users say anything less undermines the purpose of the safeguard.
What Now Sits Before Regulators and Operators
As complaints continue across multiple platforms, attention is now turning toward both operators and regulators to explain how self-exclusion systems are designed, tested, and enforced within Kenya’s betting economy.
For Sakatabets, the question is why account restriction does not happen at once after the self-exclusion tool is activated.
For the wider industry, the question is whether similar delays are being seen across other platforms.
For regulators moving into the Gambling Regulatory Authority of Kenya framework, the question is whether current oversight is strong enough to ensure that responsible gambling tools work in real time.
At the center of the entire debate remains one clear test within Kenya’s betting sector: when a user asks to stop, does the system actually stop them?
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