A suspected Nigerian internet fraudster, Ramon Abbas, popularly known as Hushpuppi, has said his “story” should inspire and give hope to Nigerians who are “suffering” because of widespread hunger and poverty.
Mr Abbas made the
assertion in a video which surfaced on social media, after he was arrested
recently in Dubai and extradited to the U.S to face criminal charges for
allegedly using the Internet to steal millions of dollars from people and
institutions around the world.
The 37-year-old
Nigerian who was resident in Dubai was known for living an extravagant
lifestyle and flaunting it on social media.
“Una suppose use my
story do documentary to give people hope,” Mr Abbas said in the video.
“But una feel say
people no deserve hope, na suffer they must dey use to. Una believe say na
wetin I deserve na to suffer.”
Mr Abbas spoke in
Pidgin English in the five-minute video.
He said many
Nigerians were living under the crushing effect of poverty because of bad government
in the country.
He said his mum
hails from Nigeria’s Niger Delta region, but that she has never benefited from
the huge money made from the oil exploitation in the region.
“What about people
in Badagry, people in Agege, enjoyment reach their side?
“What about people
wey dey Ebonyi state? Not for once I don watch news, I don hear say one
development don reach Ebonyi. All those places dem no be Nigerians, dem no
deserve enjoyment?”
Mr Abbas apparently
did the video as a response to Nigerians on social media who were questioning
his source of money and also criticising his flamboyant lifestyle.
He said Nigerians
were coming after him on social media because of the “meat” he was “eating”
abroad.
“Una come look say
meat wey I dey chop for abroad na him dey affect Nigeria, na him make Nigeria
no good, I no deserve to chop meat, I no deserve to wear better clothes, I no
even deserve to look like human being.”
He said he was
making money as “a social media influencer” from countries that were paying him
heavily to “host parties, (and) events”.
Mr Abbas in the
video talked about his personal struggle with poverty, how he got hit by a
commercial motorcycle and how he lost his younger sister and a step-mother
because of poverty and illness.
“I no enjoy one
single enjoyment from government, my papa no enjoy one enjoyment. For my own
generation, I am the only one that has escaped from poverty,” he said.
He said President
Muhammadu Buhari owes his father explanation on why there was so much poverty
in Nigeria.
In a separate video,
Mr Abbas is seen chatting over a meal with a group of persons, where they were
boasting about the enormous money he had.
The people in the
video looked like his close friends, from their interactions.
“Hushpuppi’s driver
is paid N700,000 a month,” one of the persons on the meal table said. “People
that are abusing him, you are working house boy job, they are paying you
N35,000.”
Mr Abbas cut into
the chat to confirm what the fellow had just said, adding that his driver
earned more than a “commissioner” in Nigeria and that his cleaner earned
N250,000.
They all laughed
over it.
One of them mocked
Mr Abbas’ critics, saying they would have done better by begging ‘Hushpuppi’ to
employ their fathers as his driver.
Mr Abbas is seen in
yet another video shot inside Dubai airport, where he was enthusing about the
beauty of the airport and the “enjoyment” that comes with money.
Next, he filmed
himself on a ride inside a Rolls-Royce headed towards the airport where a
private jet was waiting to fly him to Paris.
“Thank you, Jesus!”
He said inside the luxury car. Meanwhile, another Rolls-Royce was carrying his
luggage to the plane.
“This life is too
good to be real,” he screamed with childish excitement. “Paris, I am coming in
a private jet. Paris, stand up, for the real one is coming through.”
He ate assorted
fruits inside the flight and read Forbes magazine.
The video ended with
Mr Abbas arriving at Paris–Le Bourget Airport and checking into a 5-star hotel,
Four Seasons Hotels, Paris.
In a criminal
complaint filed against him, the American authorities said Mr Abbas financed
his opulent lifestyle through money he made from Internet scams and that he
belonged to an international criminal network which almost scammed an English
Premier League soccer club of about $124 million.
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