fraud cartel Bank Bene Merenti Especially in African countries such as Uganda, Nigeria and Burkina Faso, and in South Asian countries such as Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, it pretends to be affiliated with the Bank of Japan to deceive hundreds and thousands of people.
According to an exclusive report published on an Indian news portal Eastern HeraldBank Bene Merenti A crook named Dan Setgast has so far raised more than US$2.14 trillion by tricking ignorant people into multi-location fraud cartels.this Fraud Cartel Bank Bene Merenti It has left its mark in many African countries, stealing hundreds of millions of dollars from people by giving them false hope.
Bank Bene Merenti shows the market capitalization of YEM (Your Everyday Money) worth US$2.14 trillion and claims to be a Bank of Japan project. Under Japanese and international law, such a claim constitutes a serious criminal act.
Indian news portal Eastern Herald said in a report: EcoX Event Agency kicked off the event at the Grand Millennium Hotel in Downtown Dubai. Another name has come to be known as the YEM coin. They also coined the term as an abbreviation Your Everyday Money.
EcoX senior management, including Jorge Sebastiao, were also available during the event to endorse the promoters of this fraudulent YEM coin.
Muzaffar Ahmad Nouri Bajwa, editor of the Eastern Herald News Journal, was also in attendance at the event to oversee the launch, according to the Eastern Herald. Ahmad always wants to make the crypto space safer for people. He has attended several such crypto events with the same interests.
After extensive research and in-depth research, no records have been found concerning the Bene Merenti Bank. It’s not a bank or anything like that.”
this Indian news portal Dubai aims to emerge as the capital of the crypto world and while many crypto companies are very likely to enter the country, some fraud cartels and scam rackets may try to trick people. is expected to be False promises and features. Unless fraudulent cartels such as Bank Bene Merenti are kicked out of the UAE and banned globally, what fraud cartels like Bank Bene Merenti and its fake YEM coins can do in Dubai and other Middle Eastern countries? deceive 100,000 people. The presence of fraud cartels such as Banque Bene Merenti will eventually turn Dubai into a Dirty Crypto Capital activity.
The Eastern Herald said: A big projector screen and lots of applause made everyone believe what was said during the event. His 70-100 users registered on his website for YEM coin. For registration and her KYC (Know Your Customer) you have to pay a fee of US$10. This looked like a data theft scam where you had to pay to share data such as your home address or Emirates ID that is important to your personal privacy.
What is YEM coin?
An abbreviation for Your Everyday Money, YEM is claimed by its organizers to be a decentralized cryptocurrency. There are some beautiful and attractive images presented online of this fake virtual currency.
Anyone wanting to know about the YEM coin should search online for the term “YEM coin” but there are very few results about it. I didn’t think it was mentioned as a business.
The only website talking about this dubious YEM coin is Safezoneprimer.com. This website writes about YEM’s legal status as the world’s first digital fiat currency.of this website about us page wrote They are “not official Unicorn Network pages”. The website does not have physical addresses or phone numbers for contact, only a contact form.
Indian news portal Eastern Herald has reached out to SWIFT officials, but has no answer for the bank. This is because the bank (Bank Bene Merenti) is not on the books. The paper also tried searching the bank on multiple search engines, including Google, Bing, and Yahoo, but found only one he-she website, www.bbm.money. His website at Bank Bene Merenti has only one page with only one logo.
The Eastern Herald team also tried to contact several European Union banks, but they reported nothing about this “bank.”
It turned out that the YEM (Your Everyday Money) coin does not exist anywhere on the legalized blockchain network. After further investigation, the Eastern Herald discovered that no such coin exists. [YEM Coin] It exists in the real crypto market.
The BLiTZ investigative reporting team is also working to find out more about this Bank Bene Merenti or so-called YEM coin.