18/05/2026
https://www.facebook.com/share/1GSXcPgFDn/?mibextid=wwXIfr
🚨 ELDERLY SOUTH AFRICANS INCREASINGLY TARGETED IN SOPHISTICATED ONLINE BANKING FRAUDS 🚨
A deeply disturbing trend appears to be emerging across South Africa. Elderly people, many of whom are not particularly computer savvy, are increasingly becoming the primary targets of sophisticated online banking and invoice fraud syndicates.
The scam often unfolds with devastating simplicity. An elderly person decides to make a purchase, pay a supplier, attorney, contractor or service provider. Somewhere along the line, criminals gain access to communication between the parties. Banking details are then altered and the victim unknowingly pays money directly into a fraudulent account controlled by criminals. In many cases, victims only realize what has happened once the money is gone.
What is becoming increasingly concerning is the apparent level of information available to these scammers. Victims often report that the criminals seemed to know exactly when a payment was due, who the parties involved were and what amounts were expected. This has led many to question whether information is being obtained purely through malware and hacked emails, or whether there are additional leaks occurring somewhere within the financial chain itself.
Cybersecurity experts frequently warn that victims unknowingly invite “trojan horse” malware onto their devices through fake links, attachments, cloned websites or fraudulent SMS messages. Once installed, criminals may monitor emails, capture passwords and watch transactions in real time.
However, many South Africans are asking difficult questions:-
How are fraudulent accounts so easily opened?
Why are suspicious transactions not immediately flagged?
And why do banks so often appear unwilling to accept responsibility once the money has vanished?
While banks maintain that customers have a duty to protect their devices and verify banking details independently, victims are often left financially and emotionally devastated, with little recourse and even less accountability.
It is important to state clearly that there is currently no public evidence proving widespread collusion between bank employees and criminal syndicates. However, public frustration continues to grow as these crimes escalate and more vulnerable South Africans lose life savings to highly organised fraud networks.
⚠️ PLEASE WARN ELDERLY FAMILY MEMBERS:
• Never trust banking details received by email alone.
• Always verify payment details telephonically using a trusted number.
• Be suspicious of any “last minute” banking detail changes.
• Never click unknown links or attachments.
• Keep devices updated with antivirus and security protection.
• If possible, ask a trusted family member to verify large electronic payments before they are made.
One wrong payment can destroy a pensioner’s financial future.
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