MMM, the Ponzi scheme also known
as Mavrodi Mondial Moneybox, sent its participants into panic last month when
it announced that all accounts used by Nigerians had been frozen.
Precisely
on Tuesday December 13 2016, one day after the Eid-el-Maulud holiday, Nigerians
woke up to the news which many MMM enthusiasts, who fondly call themselves
Mavrodians, received with mixed feelings.
MMM
had sent out the unexpected circular to all Nigerian users explaining why
accounts will remain frozen for a period of 30 days.
The
circular urged participants to be calm and unperturbed, saying the development
was to help prevent any problems in transactions, among other reasons, during
the New Year season.
With
the duration expected to lapse on or before January 13, 2017, investors are
anxiously looking forward to mid-January, with the hope that they finally will
be able to have access to their accounts once again.
But
while some participants say they believe the accounts would be reopened,
others have remained in a worrying state, expressing doubts about the assurance
given by MMM.
“My
brother, I don’t sleep well these days. I cannot wait for middle of this month
to hear and see the good news,” said a respondent who wishes to be identified
only as Chuks.
“I
blame myself for not totally resisting the temptation because I put money just
4 days before MMM froze accounts.
“My
friends have been pledging, putting money and getting 30 per cent. Since it
wasn’t hearsay, I eventually decided to give it a try with N500,000.
“My
money is hanging now and I just want to get it back. I did for two weeks, so
obviously my interest and profit is due for collection. Let MMM please unfreeze
the accounts; I know millions too are waiting for that day.”
Another
MMM investor, Toyin, told DAILY POST that she was confident the scheme would
bounce back.
The
self-employed lady in her early thirties further lectured our correspondent on
why accounts were frozen.
“The
December period is when many investors take their money and this would affect
the aim of MMM which is to put money in people’s hands.
“Assuming
the accounts were left open, 70 percent of people would have cashed out. The
effect is that when people seek assistance, they will not get money in 9, 10
days, unlike normal circumstance when you can get within 48 hours.
“MMM
foresaw this and from experience, they know that pledges reduces during
Yuletide. It was a timely decision that Nigerians will still appreciate.”
On
how the popular scheme works, Toyin said participants can register themselves
or have someone do so for them.
“If
you come to me that you want to invest and decide to pledge N100,000, I will
help spread it. An amount can be shared into as many as 4 places or more,
depending on what the computer generates.
“I
pay on your behalf to those accounts and then inform the owners of your
payment; I also send proof. After this process, I continue to monitor. This of
course is why people like me get 5 percent referral bonus. I have 13
participants under me.
“Those
who have thousands of participants under them are the Guiders. They are the MMM
multi-millionaires; the ones you see buying cars, houses and living large.
“What
I noticed is that many actually prefer to give money to others to invest
because they don’t want to go through the stress of staying online or making
payments. Theirs is just to see credit alert.”
Meanwhile,
top MMM Nigerian guiders have continued to assure Nigerians that there is no
cause for alarm.
While
one, a self-styled Nigerian pastor, Ernest Chigozie Mbanefo, boasted
that MMM will run smoothly until Jesus Christ
comes, another threw a lavish ?end of the year party in Lagos,
apparently to boost investors’ confidence that all is well.
Similarly,
MMM founder Sergey Mavrodi, a fortnight ago warned critics to stop castigating
the scheme.
“Leave
MMM alone and let us work. Nothing has collapsed, and MMM will perfectly
resume its work in January. We can change the world!” he asserted.
But
President of Omega Fire Ministry, Apostle John Suleman, predicted doom for
the Ponzi scheme in his prophecies for the year 2017, concluding that
money-doubler will crash.
While
investors and Nigerians await the next news about MMM, the arguable fact
is that the current recession in the country helped to make the scheme popular
in Nigeria.
But
for MMM, the freezing of accounts in Nigeria does not stop it
from launching in other countries as it recently did in Kenya and Ghana.
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