
Audio By Carbonatix
Over aggrieved customers of investment clubs in Ho, in the Volta Region have threatened not to partake in the upcoming elections if government fails to assist them in retrieving monies from the clubs.
Clothed in red outfits, the over two hundred placard-wielding customers who invested huge sums of monies in the clubs hit the streets of Ho Thursday, to protest the locking up of their monies by the companies.

The network groups which gain prominence between 2014 and 2015 included Little Drop Investment Club, Prosperity and Good Health, Develop Winners, Royal Foundation, Global Lead, Royal Care, Jodeq, Clear Image Investment, Devine Rain among others.
According to the schemes, some persons who invested about GH¢380 and GH¢450 were promised returns of GH¢6000 and GH¢5000 after five months.

"They showed us photocopies of their certificates with the Coat of Arms on it and said their companies had been authorised by the Registrar General's Department to operate," a protestor, Maxwell Donku told Joy News Mawuli Yevu Agbi.
He said the companies presented some investment deals which was meant to double the deposits of customers in after some months.

"We took loans from banks to invest in the microfinance companies...I, for instance, took GH¢3,000 and invested," he added.
"It was about a year and a half ago when this network groups came to Ho promising to give us GHC6,000 after 5 months when we invest GHC380. The early investors had their returns. But till date payment has stalled. The operators of these network groups have run away with our monies, now we are suffering to pay back our loans and feed our families. We are pleading with the government to help retrieve our monies for us," Ellen Ahima wailed.
The leader of the group, Maxwell Donku said, "our findings have revealed that these network companies were duly registered with government hence government must step in to help retrieve their monies else they would be forced to boycott the upcoming general elections."
According to the customers, the companies began closing their branches in Ho after several residents had made deposits.
"We want the government to intervene and help us retrieve our monies from the microfinance operators," another demonstrator indicated.
The Brong Ahafo, Upper East and West regions were rocked with similar scams after God Is Love Fun Club, Jastar Motors and investments Company Limited, and others held the deposits of their customers ‘hostage’ for several months due to the closure of their companies by the Bank of Ghana (BoG).
Dozens of the customers in these regions also demonstrated while some headed to court to retrieve their monies.
In a related development, the Executive Secretary of the Ghana Microfinance Companies, Joseph Donkor says the companies involved are investment clubs and not microfinance companies as some of the victims are claiming.
Latest Stories
-
NPRA recovers GH¢27m in 2025, 30% of defaulted pension contributions
3 minutes -
Accra: Police probe dead body retrieved from Nkrumah Circle drain
4 minutes -
Power fluctuations slash Ashanti region water production by 959,000 cubic metres in March
8 minutes -
Beyond the festivities: Gomoa must turn visibility into development
16 minutes -
DVLA clarifies it is not responsible for Toyota Voxy commercial operations
18 minutes -
Calls for Ofori-Atta’s return a non-issue if trial proceeds in absentia – Pius Hadzide
21 minutes -
France names Ghana first beneficiary of newly established National Health Compact
26 minutes -
US Immigration, extradition outcomes likely to influence each other in Ofori-Atta case – Amanda Clinton
29 minutes -
29-year-old woman rescued after hiding in drain to escape attackers
43 minutes -
Gramps Morgan names Ghanaian business leader Monalisa Effah as Ghana-Jamaica Homecoming Ambassador
1 hour -
CAF President urges faith in African football despite AFCON 2025 issues
2 hours -
AFCON U-17: Black Starlets’ aim is to win trophy – Head Coach Prosper Ogum
2 hours -
ENFA expands access to global capital for Ghanaian SMEs
2 hours -
Beyond security: Why mobile payment fraud has become a customer experience crisis
2 hours -
Former Effia MP demands full disclosure of Truedare AI deal, warns of ‘hidden risks’
2 hours