In 2008 Sergey Mavrodi published the book "Temptation". Seven thousand copies of the book were published. |
One month after members
of the house of representatives warned Nigerians off the Mavrodi Mondial
Moneybox (MMM), the scheme has frozen withdrawals, causing panic among “Mavros”
members.
Sergey Mavrodi has been described as the Russian Bernie Madoff (SEE HERE) |
Members
of the scheme were shocked on Tuesday to find a message, instead of their
statement of account, informing them of the decision to freeze withdrawal till
the new year.
The
message read thus:
“One-Month
Freezing of Confirmed Mavros.”
“Dear
members! As usual, in the New Year season the System is experiencing heavy
workload. Moreover, it has to deal with the constant frenzy provoked by the
authorities in the mass media.
“The
things are still going well; the participants feel calm; everyone gets paid –
as you can see, there haven’t been any payment delays or other problems yet –
but!.. it is better to avoid taking risk.
“Moreover,
there are almost three weeks left to the New Year. Hence, on the basis of the
above mentioned, from now on all confirmed Mavro will be frozen for a month.”
“The
reason for this measure is evident. We need to prevent any problems during the
New Year season, and then, when everything calms down, this measure will be
cancelled. (Which we will definitely do. We hope for your understanding,
administration.”
MMM
has been in Nigeria for over one year. It has several thousands of “investors”
who put money in a scheme that has no product or service for exchange of value,
yet expect and, until today, get more money than they put in.
There
have been several warnings against participating in the scheme from the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and
the House of Representatives which also ordered an investigation into the
operation of the scheme, in October.
Two
days ago, Sergey Mavrodi, founder of MMM, wrote an open letter to the federal government, defending
the scheme, claiming it was “restoring social justice” since the federal
government was not concerned about the welfare of its citizens.
“MMM
is their only means of livelihood,” Mavrodi had said.
However, an
MMM participant who did not want to be named rued her luck.
“I knew it was going to crash and I thought I could quickly make my money before the crash. Now I am in big trouble,” the single mother of two said without disclosing the extent of her investment in the scheme.
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