*As 4 Winners Of “Win A Trip To
Dubai” In 2011 Are Left Without Even A Glo(w) Of Smile Almost 2 Years After
“Globacom Has Refused To Take Us To
Dubai After Giving Us Dummy Tickets And Using Our Pictures In National Dailies
As Winners”—Victim
“I Was Not Here When The Promo Was
Done. Are You Sure This Is Not Photoshop…?”—Confused Glo Official
When you listen to radio or watch
television these days, you are sure to see the new Globacom Telecommunications advert
which moved from using “Rule Your World” as their pay off line to using “ Glo
Unlimited”. But the one million dollar question here is: Is Glo Truly
Unlimited? If it is, how unlimited it is? By the time you are through with this
story you would form your own opinion. But as far as this blogger is concerned
in the context of this story and his findings, it is a clear case of “Fraud
Unlimited”.
Lasisi Alliu Olasunkanmi is a
hard-working bricklayer in his late 20s and a glo mobile subscriber. He is
based in Ayobo-Ipaja, a Lagos suburb. Sometime in September 2011, he was on
site working when his phone rang and on looking at the phone's screen, the caller’s
number was 121. Impulsively, he picked the call and he could not believe what
the caller said. He was told his number had emerged as one of the lucky winners
in the on-going glo promotion at that time for an all expenses paid “ Trip To
Dubai’’ for three days and that he should come to glo office. At first, as a
Nigerian, he wanted to dismiss the call as one of the usual tricks by fraudsters
looking for unsuspecting victims to exploit. So, he intelligently asked that
how much should he bring along and he was told that he didn’t need to bring any
money. He was asked whether he has International Passport and Driver’s License.
And he responded that he has only the International Passport. He was told to
come all the same to their Adeola Odeku, Victoria Island Headquarters.
So, when he got home from work he
went straight to his pastor, Rev. T.A. Babatunde who also as Nigerian told him
that the caller must be a fraudster but promised go with him all the same to
glo office on the appointed date to confirm. Meanwhile, he had been given this
number: 08055570212 when he was called with 121, said to belong to one Mr.
Bankole in the glo Marketing Communications Department for him to call when he
get to their office. And when he and his pastor got to glo office, they called
and met with the said Mr. Bankole who cross-checked his number on their data
base. His number was the first on the “Trip To Dubai” list and he was congratulated
by Mr. Bankole. He didn’t know that the congratulations was all he was going to
get as the dream of travelling to Dubai for three days began to “glow” on the
screen of his mind.
He was later told to bring his
International Passport few days after which he did on a Monday. And afterwards,
he was given an appointment, like they must have told other winners to come on
a particular day for the formalties.
On the appointed date, all the celebrity glo
ambassadors were reportedly on ground with other winners and they were all
given either dummy checks or dummy tickets as applicable. There were three
different categories of winners in the promotion. First category won one
million naira, second category won "Trip To Dubai" and third category won "Watch
Man. United Live in the UK." And that was when the part of the fraud called
promotion was committed against the whole of Nigeria. The pictures of the
winners were all taken and the next day it hit the centre spread of some
national dailies to convince everyone that the promotion was real. But Alliu’s case as you
read this and three other established cases: Adediran Folashade in Osun state,
Adebola Olasimbo in Yaba Lagos and Taiwo Ariyo Nurudeen in Osun state, has proven
otherwise. If anything, it has been “Fraud Unlimited” since 2011.
After their images had been fraudulently
used to project the image of glo as socially responsible organization in the
national dailies and making other Nigerians to believe the national lie, the mentioned winners above
were told to keep calling Mr. Bankole who told them they would be travelling by
January, 2012. But when they called him in January, he said there was a fuel subsidy
removal crisis in the name of "Occupy Nigeria" and that flight could not operate. So, he urged them to tarry a
little till after the crisis would be resolved. But alas, when the “Occupy
Nigeria” was over, it became “Occupy Mr. Bankole’s Phone” for the winners in question as he constantly
refused to pick their calls any more. Each time they tried his line with another number not known to him, the line would go off once he realized it was any of them calling.
In the course of investigating this
story, this blogger also tried Mr. Bankole’s line and the response was constantly
that the line had been diverted to another line which did not have enough
credit to receive calls. A glo official in the Marketing “Communications” Department not having enough credit on his line to receive calls? That smacks
of another fraud on its own. But not satisfied yet, this blogger paid a visit to
glo office on Victoria Island to get the other side of the story. On getting to
the gilded Mike Adenuga Tower, on Mike Adenuga Close, Off Adeola Odeku street,
this blogger was redirected by one of the security guys to 3, Ologun Agbeje
street, just adjacent to the Mike
Adenuga Close where the Marketing Communications arm of the company was said to
be located.
And a drama of sort began on reaching the office. First, the
ill-trained security guys said they could not direct this blogger to anyone who
could speak for glo. But not satisfied, this blogger insisted he had to see someone
due to the magnitude of the story. And when the security guys realized that
this blogger was not ready to give up, they told him to approach a particular
averagely tall Ibo man with a little heavy moustache said to be in the PR
section who was about to make his way in from the gate. And that’s what this
blogger did which resulted in the conversation below:
“Who told you to ask for me,” he
fired. “Nobody. I only need someone I can speak with over a story of fraud
involving glo that I’m working on.” This blogger replied. But he kept moving away
towards the entrance into their office without saying a word and this blogger
needed to ask him whether he should follow him before he reluctantly gestured
yes. On entering the reception and the facts of the case were presented to him
by way of printed copies of Alliu carrying their dummy ticket and his picture
appearing as number one winner in the Sun newspaper. The PR man, who said he
was not with glo when the promo was staged in 2011, asked a dumb question. “Are
you sure this is not photoshop?’’ And this blogger almost responded that: “No,
it is photosupermarket!”
And as if that folly of his was not
enough, when he requested to go and make photocopies of the "exhibits", he later
came out with one of the security guys at the gate whom he must have phoned to come upstairs to ask this
blogger: “what did you tell him at the gate (gesturing to the security guy)?”
And looking very embarrassed, this blogger responded: “what did he tell you I
told him?” “I’m asking you a question,” he said authoritatively. And being well
prepared for a situation like that, “I’m asking you a question too,” this
blogger responded. And when he realized this dude is a hard nut to crack, “he
said you told him you are a student carrying out a research on glo,” he challenged.
Isn’t that funny? Would a student brandish a press ID card to enter a place
where he has not come to seek a favour but assist them in telling their own
side of a reputation damaging story? Besides, what is that compared to the damning issue
on ground? And here is a PR man for that matter who also said it was a crime
for a journalist to possess the ID card of a media house he freelances for. Glo
is truly a "Nigerian company."
However, he made the photocopies he
requested and returned the original copies. He asked for full name of this
blogger, email address and phone number which were all written on the back of
his photocopies including this blog’s address. Few minutes later, this blogger
took his leave after the rain that was falling had subsided. And that was on
Thursday, 18th July, 2013. By the morning of Friday, 19th
July around 10 am, the PR man called this blogger with this number: 08055578671
asking for the phone number with which Alliu won his Trip To Dubai. And he was
told it was not only Alliu that is in that situation. He responded that others'
numbers should be sent as a text message too to him. He was sent two of the four
numbers on Saturday, 20th July, 2013.
Later in the evening, he replied with
a text message that he had forwarded the numbers to the person who would verify
them. But it’s been a week after; no response has come from glo. A call was put
to the PR man on Thursday, 25th July, and he said the person
carrying out the cross-checking had not got back to him. And he even promised
to text the number of the “slow” verifier to this blogger which he has refused
to do as you read this. The question here is: doesn’t glo have a data base from
which the verification could be done in few minutes, if they really want to do
it. That smacks of a conspiracy of silence within the Marketing Communications
arm of glo because the PR man during his rude encounter with this blogger
hinted that the said Mr. Bankole “is still in the system”. Perhaps, he must
have substituted Alliu and others with members of his own family members thinking they
would remain voiceless forever. But now that this blogger is on it, there is no
resting for the bad eggs until these four winners get their deliverables as
deserved.
PS: Probably due to printer’s devil,
Alliu’s name is mistakenly written as Olasunkanmi Taofeek (Lagos) in the Sun
publication. But his face is unmistakably on it. The story continues and it’s
ready to “go unlimited” not “glo unlimited” till it is brought to a logical conclusion…
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