
-
Israel's Gaza plan 'dangerous moment' for civilians: UN official
-
Kenya court fines teens for trying to smuggle protected ants
-
Kenya court fines ant smugglers for 'bio-piracy'
-
Young Barca earn respect but crave trophies after Inter heartbreak
-
Palestinians in razed West Bank hamlet vow to stay
-
Next pope faces 'difficult, complex' point in history, cardinals told
-
J-pop mega-group Arashi to disband after final tour
-
Inter seek Champions League final redemption after winning Barca epic
-
Pant under pressure as record IPL buy fails to justify price tag
-
BMW upbeat on riding out US tariff chaos
-
Cardinals hold last mass before conclave to elect pope
-
Ukraine, Russia trade aerial attacks ahead of WWII victory parade
-
'Prioritise peace': Nations urge restraint in India-Pakistan clash
-
Asian stocks rise as China-US trade talks boost optimism
-
Toxic mushroom victim said meal was 'delicious', Australian court hears
-
China's Xi heads to Moscow to beef up 'no limits' Putin partnership
-
World energy methane emissions near record high in 2024: IEA
-
White smoke: signalling a new pope down the ages
-
What's a cardinal? The 'princes' of the Church electing a new pope
-
Papal conclave by the numbers
-
The Vatican: a papal powerhouse, world's smallest state
-
Trump, Ukraine propel EU and UK towards defence pact
-
Syrian leader to meet Macron in first European visit
-
History beckons as cardinals gather to elect new pope
-
China's Xi aims to beef up 'no limits' Putin partnership
-
Hit by Trump cuts, journalists at Dubai-based US channel face uncertain future
-
Roglic gunning for Giro as Pogacar's absence leaves door open
-
Trump's White House creates own media universe
-
Sotheby's postpones historical gems auction after India backlash
-
Taiwan bicycle makers in limbo as US tariff threat looms
-
Tobacco town thrives as China struggles to kick the habit
-
Venezuelan opposition figures 'rescued', now in US: Rubio
-
China eases monetary policy to boost ailing economy
-
Haliburton stunner sinks Cavs as Pacers take 2-0 series lead
-
No rate cuts expected from US Fed facing 'unfavorable' conditions
-
'No one is illegal': Mormon women stage patchwork protest in Washington
-
Indonesia's silvermen beg to make ends meet
-
Toronto festival head says Trump tariffs would hurt film quality
-
Trump talks tough on China, but early focus elsewhere
-
China vows to defend 'justice' in looming trade talks with US
-
Man Utd seek to finish off Athletic Bilbao in chase for Europa glory
-
AP to continue crediting 'Napalm Girl' photo to Nick Ut after probe
-
Wallace MacDonald Holdings (WMH) Ignites a New Era of American Manufacturing with Revolutionary "Made in America" Technology Complex in Nevada
-
HigherKey Studios Set to Redefine Entertainment, Technology, and Human-Centered Innovation
-
Sportstech Provides April 2025 and LTM Business Performance Update Ahead of China Sport Show and TRNR Acquisition Close
-
Tocvan Discovers Another Near Surface High-Grade Corridor at Gran Pilar Gold - Silver Project Drills 6.1 meters of 5.4 g/t Gold and 39 g/t Silver within 41.2 meters of 1.0 g/t Gold and 10 g/t Silver
-
Evotec Receives $ 2.5 m Grant to Generate Next Generation Tuberculosis Treatments
-
Colombia moves to join China's Belt and Road
-
Martinez cried 'for two days' after nearly missing Barca triumph with injury
-
US, Chinese officials to hold trade talks in Switzerland

Indonesians fall prey to fake shaman 'magic money' scams
Indonesian mother-of-three Aslem was a domestic worker in Dubai when she started wiring cash to a self-professed shaman, believing that he would honour his promise to magically multiply her hard-earned wages.
But she returned home last year penniless and in shock, saying she had been swindled out of her life savings by a trickster who now faces trial for his complex scams, and charges of murdering nine of his victims.
"I have nothing now," Aslem, 42, told AFP from her cramped, dilapidated house in a remote village in Karawang, West Java.
"I wanted to renovate this small house my parents left me. I wanted to make them happy... I didn't manage to do that until the day they died."
In Muslim-majority Indonesia, where nearly 10 percent of the population live below the poverty line, some view shamans as traditional healers.
Aslem is one of several Indonesians who say they were scammed by people claiming to be spiritual figures, promising to turn small investments into immense wealth.
Police say some alleged scammers turn to violence when their victims come looking for their money.
The scams have circulated widely on Indonesian social media.
Just two dozen Facebook posts advertising so-called shaman investment schemes were viewed more than 1.4 million times as of this week, according to AFP Fact Check reporters in Jakarta.
One post, viewed 643,000 times from April 8 to May 17, claimed a Muslim sheikh would help people multiply their funds, and that the service did not violate the tenets of Islam.
AFP reporters contacted a WhatsApp number associated with one of the posts and were told to send photos of their identity cards to determine eligibility for the "magic money" scheme.
AFP has a global team of journalists, including in Indonesia, who debunk misinformation as part of Facebook and WhatsApp owner Meta's third-party fact-checking programme.
- Eye-watering sums -
After she moved to Dubai in 2016, Aslem said she began talking to a man her friend had recommended, who claimed he was a Javan shaman named Aki Banyu.
Aslem, who now sells snacks from her porch, recalled the first meeting with the man on a 2019 trip home.
The man prepared offerings, chanted a mantra, and promised her money would multiply soon, she said.
She later sent him around 288 million rupiah ($19,500) after he promised to flip her earnings into eye-watering sums totalling nearly $2 million, she told AFP.
Police later identified the man as Wowon Erawan, a 60-year-old who they said worked with two partners to trick migrant workers into sending them money.
In a January press conference, police accused the trio of murdering nine people including Erawan's wife and stepchildren to cover up their crimes.
Police said the three men had been arrested, and that they had confessed to killing victims with pesticide-laced drinks.
They had planned to poison Aslem after she asked about her investment in late 2022, police said.
The men arranged a meeting with her but she declined to go after her friends told her that Erawan and his friends were con artists, according to police.
– 'It was like a nightmare' -
Another migrant worker, mother-of-three Neng Hana Patiningrum, told AFP she believes she also escaped death at the hands of the scammers.
The 30-year-old wired more than 100 million rupiah to the same shaman but stopped sending funds in 2021 when her questions went unanswered, she said.
She returned to Indonesia but didn't meet him because of heavy rains.
Her friend, Siti Fatimah, did not survive to tell her story.
She went missing before her body was found in waters near Bali in early 2021. Police blamed the trio.
"I was shocked. How can one be so evil to scam the money we worked so hard to earn? I am traumatised," said Patiningrum.
Erawan repented and apologised to victims' families at the police press conference.
The trio face the death penalty if found guilty.
In April police arrested another accused serial killer shaman, 45-year-old Slamet Tohari, after a man was reported missing by his family.
Tohari also stands accused of boasting he could magically multiply money, luring victims into rituals before poisoning them with potassium cyanide when they asked for their money back.
At least 12 bodies have been uncovered on Slamet's land, according to police, who said in a statement last month the number could be higher after they received further reports of 28 missing people.
Meanwhile, victims told AFP they have been left to live with empty pockets and the shame of falling for the con.
"It was like a nightmare. People kept telling me I was stupid and reckless," Patiningrum said, sobbing.
"But I never expected this to happen."
P.M.Smith--AMWN