Times of Oman

‘Never share bank’s personal details’

-

Bank Muscat, in keeping with its commitment to customer care, engages in awareness campaigns to educate customers on varied fraudulent activities.

They regularly advise people not to give banking ID or other confidenti­al informatio­n over the phone, via social networking, or over the internet.

The Bank Muscat advisory adds: Do not transfer funds without due validation of the beneficiar­y or recipient, as funds once transferre­d cannot be reversed.

Do not store sensitive informatio­n like credit/debit card details, User IDs and Password of Internet & Mobile Banking on your phone. Do not forget to inform the bank if you change your contact informatio­n like mobile number, email ID, Address informatio­n etc.

“Bank Muscat warns customers to never share personal informatio­n or financial informatio­n via SMS, WhatsApp, call or email. Individual­s should not follow the instructio­ns mentioned in SMS sent from a not trusted source and delete such SMS instantly.

“The bank urges its custom- Scammer: hello, congratula­tions…are you Pakistani or Bengali? Victim: No Irani Scammer: Okay no problem, just one second… wait… I’m calling to tell you that you have won a prize of 20,000 rials. Victim: Oh thank you so much. Now what? Scammer: Do you have an account number? ers to please call the Call Centre, number located on reverse side of card, if any urgent communicat­ion asking for personal informatio­n is received.”

One resident targeted by the scammers decided to play them at their own game. “The first time they called me, they asked if I was Omani. When I said yes, they immediatel­y hung up on me. The second time I was called, they asked the same question. I told them I was Persian, and they continued the conversati­on. I think they are intentiona­lly targeting expats in Oman,” Ahmed said.

Ahmed, who wishes to keep his identity concealed, would usually hang up as soon as he realized who was on the other line. But after receiving similar calls in the past, curiosity got the better of him and he was all ears.

“We are calling from Omantel. You’ve won a prize of 20,000 rials from Omantel. Congratula­tions and praise to God. God willing you will receive the funds in your account today at Bank X. Do you have the account number?”

Ahmed gave the scammers the number of an old account, with no funds in it. The scammer continued his con: “You will receive OMR 5,000 from Bank X in Oman, five thousand from Bank X in Dubai, another five thousand from a Saudi bank, five thousand from a bank in Bahrain. OMR 20,000 will come to you from all these banks, now are you ready with the expiration number, brother?”

Ahmed supplied the required info and his phone immediatel­y started to receive messages from the bank his account is with, giving him a new PIN number.

The scammer tells his victim that it’s the pin number. The scammer is trying to infiltrate the account, and for security reasons, a text was sent to the owner of the account with a new pin number.

Instead of giving the new PIN, Ahmed gives his old PIN. But it doesn’t take long for the scammer to become agitated.

“No! what are you saying, I said give me the number in the message. The new pin number. What is it? This is the old pin. What’s the new PIN? With the new PIN, in the name of God, you will be receiving the funds.

Ahmed: “So when is the money coming? I want to buy a car.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman