QNet affiliates arrested in Ghana over hostage recruitment
Two QNet affiliates in Ghana have been arrested following a hostage recruitment situation.
Two QNet affiliates in Ghana have been arrested following a hostage recruitment situation.
A QNet affiliate in Ghana has committed suicide. The death follows reports the former teacher took out a loan to join QNet.
Ghanaian authorities seem to be having a hard time reining in QNet scammers. Despite multiple arrests and deportations, QNet recruitment efforts persist.
Afghanistan’s Ministry of the Interior has banned QNet nationwide. Forty QNet staff and promoters in Kabul have also been arrested on fraud charges.
A group of affiliates in Ghana decided to market QNet by posing as National Security Operatives. This didn’t go down well with the National Security Council, leading to actual National Security Operatives arresting the QNet affiliates.
Evidently QNet International’s pyramid scheme isn’t doing to well, prompting the company to use human trafficking as a recruitment tool. No, that’s not a play on words. Authorities in Liberia have made arrests, smashing QNet International’s human trafficking ring.
Authorities in Côte d’Ivoire have banned Crowd1 and QNet. The stated reason for the ban is both companies operate as scams and facilitate money laundering.
The Indian regulatory crackdown on QNet continues, following three new arrests by the Odisha EOW. Properties connected to QNet and eBiz in Hyderabad have also been seized.
Authorities in India have shut down Serfa Marketing Private Limited, a QNet spinoff launched by former affiliate Baki Srinivas Reddy.
QNet’s Indian operations have been shut down by the Union Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA). The company’s management and top promoters are also wanted by authorities.