Audio By Carbonatix
Kwame, a 29-year-old graduate, got a WhatsApp message promising to double his money in two weeks. The offer came with slick flyers, glowing testimonials, and a business certificate. Hoping to quickly escape unemployment, he invested GH₵1,000. At first, it seemed legit, he was added to a Telegram group where others showed off their supposed profits. But when his payout day came, the group vanished, the contacts went quiet, and so did his savings.
Kwame’s story is just like thousands of Ghanaians who fall for online investment scams. From promises of doubling money to fake forex trading sites, social media has become a hotspot for scammers targeting people desperate for financial help.
A New Face of an Old Problem
Fraud in Ghana has grown from “sakawa” scams to more schemes on social media. Platforms like Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp have become hotspots for scammers who take advantage of mobile money services and the country’s large internet user base. From romance scams targeting lonely individuals, with scammers using stolen photos to create fake relationships and eventually ask for money. To fake job offers, preying on those seeking work, offering appealing positions but then charging fees that disappear along with the scammer. Investment and money-doubling schemes promise quick profits through forex, crypto, or betting, but they collapse like pyramid schemes, leaving victims with nothing. Some scammers pretend to be celebrities, pastors, or businesses, fooling followers with fake giveaways, prayers, or discounts. Others use mobile money fraud, pretending to be telecom workers or claiming “wrong transfers” to trick people into sending money.
How Scammers Operate
Scammers on social media do not usually rush their victims. Instead, they take their time to build trust. They create fake profiles using stolen photos, inspirational quotes, or flashy lifestyles to seem believable. After making contact, they start grooming their victims, then to keep control, they use psychological pressure, making up emergencies that require secrecy and fast action. Technology helps them fool people even more: WhatsApp voice notes make them seem real, mobile money allows instant transfers, and encrypted apps let them disappear without a trace. In the end, the story is almost always the same, once the money is sent, the scammer vanishes, leaving victims confused, ashamed, and broke.
Voices from the Ground
Mary, a teacher from Takoradi, lost GH₵1,500 after a man she trusted and believed loved her suddenly disappeared. Kwaku, a recent graduate, paid a “registration fee” for a job he found online, only to be blocked by the so-called recruiters.
Many victims remarked that the scammers are getting more creative and smarter with their initiatives. One of such victims sighted that a scammer promised him a work and pay job, and the scammer sent money to him after his first successful job, but requested for a registration fee before the second job will be given and paid.
Telecom companies also report a rise in fraud cases and stress that educating the public is crucial. Together, these voices reveal how scams thrive in silence, leaving victims isolated and with little hope for justice.
Why It Thrives and What It Costs
Social media scams in Ghana thrive due to a mix of economic struggles, cultural pressures, and weak law enforcement. High youth unemployment leads some young people to see fraud as an easy way to make money, while the “get-rich-quick” image popular on social media fuels both hope and risk. At the same time, low digital skills and gaps in policing make it easier for scammers to operate without being caught.
The impact is serious. Some victims lose hundreds and thousands of cedis each year, along with their trust and self-respect. Many face shame and emotional pain, while the public becomes more cautious about online deals. Businesses and e-commerce platforms find it hard to earn trust, and Ghana’s reputation internationally often suffers because of fraud links.
Conclusion
Fighting social media scams in Ghana requires both awareness and opportunity. The Cyber Security Authority, and telecom companies should keep warning people, while experts say digital literacy should be taught in schools, churches, and communities. Stronger enforcement and international cooperation are important, but real change also depends on creating jobs and reducing the temptation of quick money.
For victims like Kwame, the losses go beyond money, they are emotional too. His story reminds us that behind every flashy ad or promise of fast profits, there could be a trap. Social media isnot the enemy, but without caution, it can be used for fraud. The lesson is clear: always verify before you trust. If an online offer seems too good to be true, it probably is.
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