According to social media reports, Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, is restricting the accounts of African users, mainly Nigerians and those who use its peer-to-peer (P2P) exchange.
Many Nigerians have gone to Twitter to complain that their accounts were blocked by the exchange without explanation.
#BinanceStopScamming Trends
Many Binance users, particularly Nigerians and other Africans, claimed that they were denied access to their wallets (accounts) for no apparent reason. Some have claimed that they have seen significant abnormalities in their wallet, causing them to lose a significant portion of their investment due to the current drop in cryptocurrency values.
Ama Judy was one of many who spoke out, claiming that after the exchange held her digital assets for ten months, it disabled her account on Tuesday, January 25, 2022, causing her and her family anguish. She said:
“It’s been 10 months now that Binance held my hard-earned crypto, I have reached out to customer care severally, till now I have not been given any tangible reason for this act. Binance is purposely out to scam Africans and rip them off their hard-earned crypto and I believe there are many persons out there that can attest to this.
“This morning I tried logging in to my @binance account and I noticed my account has been disabled with my hard-earned crypto in it, disabled with no prior notification. Is this not robbery?”
Another user, Charles, said that the exchange disabled his account with over $35,000 in it. He noted that the exchange customer service has been unresponsive and negligent.
https://twitter.com/charles21590879/status/1486264975551311872
TXmny’s case was peculiar in that he claimed his account had been suspended because he received bnb from a conventional wallet.
My account was suspended for receiving bnb from a regular wallet. I wasn’t given a tangible reason all they said was they need to investigate the coin and I have to wait for a month before I can get any solution. I was told it a problem with BSC network. I need my account active pic.twitter.com/2hewR98VEP
— Txmny (@txmny) January 26, 2022
As a result, many Nigerians have continued to trend the hashtag #BinanceStopScamming with hope that their grievances will be heard by the exchange. Many customers used the hashtags #BinanceStealingCrypto and #BinanceStopScamming in their tweets, and some included screenshots of contentious comments they received from the platform’s customer service team. Due to the large amount of comments on the matter, #BinanceStopScamming was the #1 trending topic on Nigerian Twitter on Wednesday.
Related article | A Binance Headquarter In Dubai? Is CZ Discussing It With Regulators?
Regulatory Issues
Binance has been battling with regulatory issues for the previous two to four years, forcing the company to relocate its headquarters from multiple countries as many central banks began to crack down on cryptocurrencies.
As of the time of writing, Binance had not responded to the allegations on Twitter.
The CZ-led company was recently the subject of a $100 million scam investigation by Pakistani police. The country’s Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) launched an investigation after Binance users in the country accused the exchange of tricking them into sending money to unknown third-party wallets.
BTC/USD trades at $36k on Binance. Source: TradingView
Due to the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN) ban on cryptocurrencies, many Nigerians have been forced to participate in the market through P2P exchanges and chat groups where buyers and sellers meet to exchange tokens for cash. Although these approaches are an alternative, they are nonetheless faulty because they rely heavily on trust and have a high crime rate.
Binance’s users may fall as a result of the widespread loss of faith, providing its competitors with the kind of leverage they want.
Just withdrew my digital Asset from the useless platform..All Africans should do the same. .#Binance #BinanceStopScamming pic.twitter.com/7rxOtJ4gYe
— Olamide (@meedae122) January 26, 2022
Related article | Binance CEO Weighs In On Crypto Regulation, Dubai, And Crypto Ad-Ban