

The New Era is a daily national newspaper owned by the government of Namibia. Recent posts ǁGui-aisa mario!nâ ǂnoabas !oabadi aoǁguib … ministers ǂnoaba-aon ǂūsitanisensa ra dîsaob !naka mâi !Arun ge Indiaba !oa ge ǁkhana-ūhe Chinese !hūǁîb di !nuri!gâhes ǂkhanin ge gā hâ Buinosi, kuhaniwa kona zetisa hahulu kuiponda Busholi bwa likomu buzwelapili mwa Zambezi Popular This Week Kopano ya IPC inyaza kutubwa kwamandu mwa Katima Busholi bwa likomu buzwelapili mwa Zambezi Buinosi, kuhaniwa kona zetisa hahulu kuiponda Chinese !hūǁîb di !nuri!gâhes ǂkhanin ge gā hâ !Arun ge Indiaba !oa ge ǁkhana-ūhe About us This will be charged to your FNB account your network provider wont. Please remain vigilant and protect your hard-earned cash at all times,” Namaseb advised. Your funds are secured with your e-wallet PIN and can be kept for you for as long. FNB eWallet Solutions and Cash Converters announced the launch of the Cashies Card on 4 March which will, over time, replace in-store cash payouts to.
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Unsuspecting clients then give up the OTP, which allows the fraudsters access to their eWallets for future transfers and withdrawals. “We would like to tell our customers that the OTP is sufficient control, as it seeks authorisation of the account/wallet holder. As with any PIN or password, do not give your OTP to anyone, as this step is crucial to protecting your funds. If anyone calls you claiming to be from the bank and asks you for your OTP, pin or password of any kind, hang up the phone immediately and report the incident to the bank. We reiterate again that FNB will never request any security information from you over the phone – and you, in turn, should never give out any information over the phone. The fraudster then calls the client with a fake excuse to attempt to obtain the OTP.

Namaseb explained that, first, the fraudster will select a random cellphone number and attempt to link the eWallet of the selected number to their own smartphone, which triggers a notification (with an OTP – one time pin), asking to confirm if the customer is indeed the one attempting to link their wallet. “We have seen this new scam making the rounds and urge our customers to take note of how it works to protect themselves.” Jerome Namaseb, head of Retail Transactional Banking, has advised that a new scam has emerged, where fraudsters access and manage customers’ eWallet accounts on the FNB App.
