Sowetan

Rising cost of living gives rise to scammers

- By Tahir Sema Sema is head of communicat­ion Gauteng department of human settlement­s

Beware, scammers are everywhere. The state of the economy post-Covid, rising inflation, rising interest rates, the rising costs of oil, fuel, necessitie­s and all other goods and services have also given way to the rise of scammers who prey on innocent people for their hard-earned money.

From work to home, friends and family, you will hear about scams making the rounds in SA, increasing­ly sophistica­ted scams.

What is worse is that these criminals operate with supposed impunity and with total disregard for the law and humanity. A few instances of scams worth exposing are firstly the sale of RDP houses and land to the poor and vulnerable. These scams often originate on social media; Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, TikTok and WhatsApp claiming to offer a fully subsidised government house (RDP) for “cold drink” money.

A shoddy advert is placed on social media platforms calling all those interested in receiving a free house or land from the government to contact them. Upon contacting the given WhatsApp number you are reassured of the authentici­ty of the claims and asked to pay a bribe. Once you pay the bribe, you are given excuse after excuse as to when you will receive your house and land but receive nothing in return. Sadly, many innocent people, including the elderly, have fallen victim to these unscrupulo­us individual­s.

The other scam is where the scamsters pretend to be a prominent politician or member of society and ask supporters, businesspe­ople, or good Samaritans to urgently send funds via a supermarke­t counter cash transfer or EFT to a mobile number so the money cannot be traced, or the transactio­n cannot be reversed. The credibilit­y of prominent people is used to dupe unsuspecti­ng people into transferri­ng money urgently to handle a desperate situation with the promise that they will pay you the money back by the evening.

The plethora of other scams to guard against include cellphone theft and cashless card withdrawal, or the scammers sending WhatsApp messages to your contacts asking them to lend you money urgently, smooth pickpocket­s in busy areas, email phishing scams claiming to have sent you proof of payment in the attachment to lure you to click a suspicious link exposing your personal informatio­n, SMS scams to click on a link to gain access to your phone and bank accounts.

I know of one family member, a colleague and a friend who have fallen victim to the above scams. These are intelligen­t people that just got caught off guard, so beware, the scams are now increasing­ly sophistica­ted. These scamsters are getting caught, like the 41-year-old lady from Soweto who was tracked, arrested and charged this week with fraud, for illegally selling an RDP house to an unsuspecti­ng desperate victim.

If you buy government land illegally you could construct your house only for it to be demolished. You will then be left not just with a major hole in your pocket but also possibly in jail for illegal occupation of land. To protect yourself, never give anyone money for something the government gives for free, call the police or closest government offices to verify informatio­n, research on the internet about the individual or company, do not click on any link that looks suspicious and report scams to the local authoritie­s.

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