MMM Launch In Ghana And Kenya. Nigerians Going Crazy

While Mavrodi Mondial Moneybox (MMM), the world’s largest Ponzi schemes of all time, is conquering the African continent, Nigerians who were denied access to their accounts for about a month can’t keep mum.

Some MMM members and just concerned citizens took to social media to comment on the recent launch of the sceme in Kenya and Ghana

Queendalyn Adaeze Chynma: Wow! So close! I hope they give 50% return over there instead of the 30% they gave here. I regret not joining it till they went for Christmas holiday. Am relocating to Ghana. Can’t miss the opportunity of becoming a millionaire the second time.

Nelson Asegiemhe: MMM don dey those countries since naw… If you check their list of countries, u will see they are there, even in the USA, MMM is runing there… MMM have not crashed at least until January, if they don’t return, then you guys can criticize all you want, but for now just PAUSE!!! and shhhhh…

Chris Jim White: that wasnt a lie. tho i wasnt directly involved, i know many who made millions thru mmm within a short period.

Don Martino: Ghanians will be the next to get scammed by this ponzi scheme.

Prince Reggie: Ghanaians are not as timid as Nigerians, they won’t take it hook line and sinker like Nigerians…but who knows, money has a way of making people become stupid.

Blessing Anyanwu: So the reasons they gave for temporary freezing of Nigerian MMM account doesn’t apply to Ghana, Kenya and other African countries which could be in their checklist. And why haven’t they restored South Africas after 7 months of temporary closure? I’m just curious because people really believe in them and there is so much hardship in the country so let’s no make it worse.

Nigerian Army denies report of mutiny by soldiers in Bama

The Nigerian Army has denied reports that soldiers of the 21 Brigade in Bama, Borno state became mutinous on Friday, December 16.

Nigerian Army has said no shootings or mutiny happened in Bama
News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the General Officer Commanding of the 7 Division of the Army Brigadier General Victor Ezegwu said there was no truth in the report that soldiers in the 21 brigade turn their guns on their commanding officers.

Ezegwu said:

I want to assure that nothing like mutiny happened in Bama. Nothing happened. I just came back from Bama and nothing like that happened.
Recall that reports emerged early on Friday that decorum was lost at the 21 Brigade in Bama, Borno state after soldiers went on rampage, complaining of maltreatment by their senior officers.

The enraged soldiers began to shoot indiscriminately, causing a scare among residents.

The Army has now denied the claims.

After MMM Crashed Now We Have NNN..

A new money doubling scheme, NNN, has debuted in Nigeria just few days after the “alleged” crashing of popular scheme MMM Nigeria.

The new Ponzi scheme, NNN
It is believed that the new scheme is modeled after MMM as NNN promises 35% on investments by participants.

According to a statement on its website, “NNN is a community of ordinary people, selflessly helping each other, a kind of mutual aid. This is the first sprout of something new in modern soulless and ruthless world of greed and hard cash.”

It added that; “The goal here is not the money. The goal is to ACQUIRE AS MUCH AS YOU CAN.”

According to the website, NNN is owned by the participants, its a community by the people and for the people. A team of freedom lovers in America headed by an influential Yoruba man came up with a logic ad tested it offline in New York City in 2014. In September 2015, these men held a conference in VI Lagos where they introduced NNN logic. It was an improved MMM system- there will be no moratorium and the system will be automated.

Naij.com cannot authenticate if this is a real Ponzi scheme or a fraudulent act by some Nigerians who want to swindle unsuspecting money lovers.

Meanwhile, aside MMM and Ultimate Cycler, here is a list of 5 Ponzi schemes trending among young adults in Nigeria.

Ugandan court orders arrest of Wizkid for missing show

An arrest warrant has been issued for Nigerian music star Wizkid for failing to honour a contract for a concert with a client.

Ugandan court says Wizkid should be arrested for missing a show in the country even after collecting performance fee
The arrest order was issued by a Buganda Road chief magistrates court.

The Ugandan reports that the order for the arrest of Wizkid, born Ayodeji Ibrahim Balogun, was signed by presiding judge Moses Baligeya Mufumbiro.

The charges against Wizkid were obtaining money by false pretense, cheating and conspiracy to defraud.

The charges were brought against by lawyers of Muwema co advocates and solicitors who are counsel to a company called Face TV which is accusing Wizkid of receiving $60,000 (around N27million) as performance fee for a show that he never showed up for.

First page of the arrest warrant for Wizkid by a Ugandan court
Face TV said after Wizkid’s team agreed to the deal, the company incurred extra expenses for booking flights and other logistics to the tune of $300,000 and also sold tickets to 25,000 people for the concert that eventually did not take place.

Page 2 of the arrest warrant issued for Wizkid by an Ugandan court.

The Ugandan reports that Wizkid was billed to perform at Lugogo Cricket Oval on December 3 but did not show up for the event.

Clearance of ATR engines lies with PIA, original manufacturers: Civil Aviation Authority

Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) has said that it is “doing its best to assist” Pakistan International Airline (PIA) in evaluating the current condition of its ATR aircraft fleet, and the final decision lies with PIA and the original manufacturers (OEM) of the aircraft to determine whether its engines are cleared for operation or not.

CAA Deputy Director General Nadeem Sharif Pasha stated in the letter, sent to PIA and dated December 13, that though the shakedown inspections of all ATR aircraft are underway, the “inspections of internal conditions of ATR engines is beyond our (CAA) scope”.

He stated that “significant observations” were made when the technical records of all aircraft were reviewed.

CAA letter

CAA letter
“The results of audits conducted by airworthiness field offices are indicating shortcomings in maintenance, quality assurance and Airworthiness Management System of PIAC,” the letter added.

The CAA letter added that engine trend analysis and health monitoring of engines is the responsibility of PIA, and the CAA has collected the statistical data of total engines failed since the induction of the ATR aircraft.

“The analysis of data is reflecting an alarming trend of engine failures due to HPT blades, main bearings, surging and oil system issues,” said the CAA letter sent to PIA.

The letter further stated that the aircraft were inducted in 2007, and the expected life of the engine’s HPT blades was 15,000 cycles by the OEM, calculated as one cycle being equal to one flight hour (01 FHrs) if taken as an average rate of utilisation.

The airline experienced six inflight shutdowns during a span of four years, after which on recommendations from the OEM, the airline reduced the life of hot section components to 5,000 FHrs.

“Even after the adoption of program for replacement of HPT blades at 5,000 FHrs, the critical issue of inflight shutdowns could not be controlled,” said the letter.

“As per data of premature failure of PW 127 engines, PIAC has 20 incidents of inflight shutdowns due to HPT blades failures.”

The letter added that the total cases of scheduled and unscheduled engine failures was 90 and out of these, most of the cases are attributed to core engine components failure.

Earlier this month, PIA decided to ground all 10 ATR planes in its fleet after a decision by the CAA to hold shakedown tests of the aircraft.

The decision to ground the ATR fleet came days after PIA flight PK-661 carrying 48 passengers and crew crashed on the way to Islamabad from Chitral.

Aisha Buhari donates food items to Christians for Christmas

Wife of Nigeria’s president, Hajiya Aisha Buhari, on Thursday, December 14, donated some bags of rice and cartons of liquid milk to the Christian community in Abuja for Christmas, Vanguard reports.

According to her, the donation was to support the Christian families of the First Baptist Church in FCT, Abuja.

Aisha Buhari donates food items to Christians for Christmas

Aisha, who was represented by Mrs Dolapo Osinbajo, the wife of the vice president, said the kind gesture was done out of passion and love.

She said: “I know there are men of God and people of God here and I see a lot of Christian mothers, the youth and children too, it is lovely to be here.

“The Bible says how good and pleasant it is when God makes us enjoy together in unity.

“I am not here in my own capacity; I am here representing the wife of the president of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

“Everyone knows that she has a large heart and she has sent a lot of items to the Christian community, I am here to watch the handing over of the items to them.”

Reacting after, the FCT chairman, Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Rev. Samson Jonah, thanked Hajiya Buhari for identifying with the Christian community at this festive period.

Yahoo’s big breach helps usher in an age of hacker anxiety

Yahoo has become the worst-case example of an unnerving but increasingly common phenomenon massive hacks that steal secrets and other potentially revealing information from our personal digital accounts, or from big organisations that hold sensitive data on our behalf.

On Wednesday, Yahoo disclosed a gargantuan breach affecting more than a billion user accounts, the largest such attack in history. The company said that attack happened in August 2013, although Yahoo only discovered it recently.

Worse, the company’s announcement followed a similar announcement last September of a 2014 hack one Yahoo ascribed to an unnamed foreign government that affected 500 million accounts.

Neither Yahoo breach has yet been linked to online fraud or any specific repercussions for Yahoo users. But their disclosure closely follows US intelligence concerns about Russian hacking of Democratic emails during the presidential campaign not to mention other recent attacks on a major health insurer, a medical lab-test company and the government office that manages millions of federal employees.

“The lesson is clear: no organisation is immune to compromise,” said Jeff Hill, director of product management for cybersecurity consultant Prevalent. And since most of us are dependent on big organisations that hold our digital lives in their hands, in a broad sense that effectively means no one is safe.

Government attackers
Of course, it’s not that simple. The most sophisticated break-ins are likely the work of digital burglars working for foreign governments that are mostly interested in manipulating their enemies, not emptying your bank account.

In the past few years, hackers tied to foreign governments are believed to have stolen emails to embarrass celebrities and Hollywood moguls (recall the Sony Pictures break-in during 2014) and possibly even to influence the 2016 presidential election.

“Espionage has gone digital like so many other things our world,” said Steve Grobman, chief technology officer at Intel Security. “We’re increasingly seeing data being used as a weapon, where leaked or fabricated information is being used to intentionally damage individuals and governments.”

Yahoo’s security breakdowns could turn into expensive deal breakers for the Sunnyvale, California, company.

Both lapses occurred during the reign of Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer, a once-lauded leader who found herself unable to turn around the company in the four years since her arrival. Earlier this year, Yahoo agreed to sell its digital operations to Verizon Communications for $4.8 billion a deal that may now be imperilled by the hacking revelations.

Two hacks, more than a billion accounts
Yahoo didn’t say if it believes the same hacker might have pulled off two separate attacks. The Sunnyvale, California, company blamed the late 2014 attack on a hacker affiliated with an unidentified foreign government, but said it hasn’t been able to identify the source behind the 2013 intrusion.

Yahoo has more than a billion monthly active users, although some have multiple accounts and others have none at all. An unknown number of accounts were affected by both hacks.

In both attacks, the stolen information included names, email addresses, phone numbers, birthdates and security questions and answers. The company says it believes bank-account information and payment-card data were not affected.

But hackers also apparently stole passwords in both attacks. Technically, those passwords should be secure; Yahoo said they were scrambled by a cryptographic technique called hashing. But hackers have become adept at cracking secured passwords by assembling huge dictionaries of similarly scrambled phrases and matching them against stolen password databases.

That could mean trouble for any users who reused their Yahoo password for other online accounts. Yahoo is requiring users to change their passwords and invalidating security questions so they can’t be used to hack into accounts. (You may get a reprieve if you’ve changed your password since September.) Security experts said the 2013 attack was likely the work of a foreign government fishing for information about specific people. One big tell: It doesn’t appear that much personal data from Yahoo accounts has been posted for sale online, meaning the hack probably wasn’t the work of ordinary criminals.

That means most Yahoo users probably don’t have anything to worry about, said J.J. Thompson, CEO of Rook Security.

Questions for Verizon
News of the additional hack further jeopardises Yahoo’s plans to fall into Verizon’s arms. If the hacks cause a user backlash against Yahoo, the company’s services wouldn’t be as valuable to Verizon, raising the possibility that the sale price might be re-negotiated or the deal may be called off. The telecom giant wants Yahoo and its many users to help it build a digital ad business.

After the news of the first hack broke, Verizon said it would re-evaluate its Yahoo deal and in a Wednesday statement said it will review the “new development before reaching any final conclusions”. Spokesman Bob Varettoni declined to answer further questions.

At the very least, the security lapses “definitely will help Verizon in its negotiations to lower the price,” Gartner analyst Avivah Litan predicted. Yahoo has argued that news of the 2014 hack didn’t negatively affect traffic to its services, strengthening its contention that the Verizon deal should be completed under the original terms.

“We are confident in Yahoo’s value and we continue to work toward integration with Verizon,” the company said.

Investors appeared worried about the Verizon deal. Yahoo’s shares fell 96 cents, or 2 per cent, to $39.95 after the disclosure of the latest hack.—AP

Published in Dawn

Today In History

1431 Henry VI of England is crowned King of France.

1653 Oliver Cromwell takes on dictatorial powers with the title of “Lord Protector.”

1773 To protest the tax on tea from England, a group of young Americans, disguised as Indians, throw chests of tea from British ships in Boston Harbor.

1835 A fire in New York City destroys property estimated to be worth $20,000,000. It lasts two days, ravages 17 blocks, and destroys 674 buildings including the Stock Exchange, Merchants’ Exchange, Post Office, and the South Dutch Church.

1863 Confederate General Joseph Johnston takes command of the Army of Tennessee.

1864 Union forces under General George H. Thomas win the Battle at Nashville, smashing an entire Confederate army.

1930 In Spain, a general strike is called in support of the revolution.

1939 The National Women’s Party urges immediate congressional action on equal rights.

1940 British troops carry out an air raid on Italian Somalia.

1944 Germany mounts a major offensive in the Ardennes Forest in Belgium. As the center of the Allied line falls back, it creates a bulge, leading to the name–the Battle of the Bulge.

1949 Chinese Communist leader Mao Tse-tung is received at the Kremlin in Moscow.

1950 President Harry Truman declares a state of National Emergency as Chinese communists invade deeper into South Korea.

1976 President Jimmy Carter appoints Andrew Young as Ambassador to the United Nations.

1978 Cleveland becomes the first U.S. city to default since the depression.

1998 The United States launches a missile attack on Iraq for failing to comply with United Nations weapons inspectors.

2003 President George W. Bush signs the CAN-SPAM Act of 2003, which establishes the United States’ first national standards regarding email and gives the Federal Trade Commission authority to enforce the act.

Born on December 16

1485 Catherine of Aragon, first wife of Henry VIII, who bore him six children; only one, Mary I, survived to adulthood.

1770 Ludwig Van Beethoven, German composer best known for his 9th Symphony.

1775 Jane Austen, novelist (Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice).

1917 Arthur C. Clarke, English science fiction writer (2001: A Space Odyssey)

1932 Sir Quentin Saxby Blake, illustrator and children’s writer; received the Hans Christian Andersen Award (2002) and was Britain’s first Children’s Laureate (1999–2001).

1936 Morris Dees, activist; co-founder of the Southern Poverty Law Center.

1938 Liv Ullmann, Norwegian actress and director; won
Golden Globe for Best Actress–Motion Picture Drama for The Emigrants (1971).

1943 Steven Bochco, TV producer and writer (Hill Street Blues, L.A. Law).

1949 Billy Gibbons, singer, songwriter, musician with ZZ Top and Moving Sidewalks bands.

1955 Prince Lorenz of Belgium, Archduke of Austria-Este.

1962 William Perry, pro football defensive lineman nicknamed The Refrigerator because of his size.

1963 Benjamin Bratt, actor best known for his role of Rey Curtis on the Law & Order TV series.

1969 Adam Riess, astrophysicist; shared 2006 Shaw Prize in Astronomy and 2011 Nobel Prize in Physics for providing evidence the expansion of the universe is accelerating.