Abeg app, a peer-to-peer (P2P) social payments platform, has disabled its withdrawal feature following the malfunctioning of the app, according to news reaching Glamtush.
This has thrown hundreds of users to confusion as no withdrawals can be carried out, leaving their millions of Naira stuck in the app’s system.
Abeg Quick Cash app is not directly a quick loan app, but the platform enables users to send or request quick cash from another Abeg user without having to input any bank details. All you need is their Abeg tag to send them money and request funds from them.
The app was founded by three young men, Muheez Akanni, Michael Okoh, and Dare Adekoya, and is only available to Nigerians, for now. Funding an Abeg wallet requires a Bank Verification Number (BVN) and a local phone number linked to your account.
The Abeg app is supposed to make payments and withdrawals as easy as ever. However, millions of naira belonging to various Nigerians are currently stuck in the app, Quick Loan Arena understands.
ENigeria Newspaper quotes a user who says, “Recently, Abeg app has been unstable; accounts of customers with large sums of money have been disabled, and the latest to set the roof on fire was restricting the withdrawal feature, which lets consumers to access their monies when needed.”
The Newspaper adds that thousands of disgruntled users have started reporting the app on Google Play Store, while others have removed it, resulting in its de-ranking on the platform a few days ago.
“Thousands of users also took to the comment area to express their dissatisfaction with the app’s inconsistencies, with phony pledges from the owners to remedy the problems, all to no effect. Many people are concerned that Abeg, as BBNaija main sponsor, spent N2 billion yet did not address the platform’s problems,” ENigeria Newspaper reports.
Dare Adekoya, the CEO of Abeg app, is a billionaire IT guru, programmer, entrepreneur, and product developer who catapulted to prominence after Nigerians realized he was the app’s co-founder.
The app owner released a press release that they have gotten the problem resolved, even though users are still complaining that the problem persists.
Although Abeg is similar to Cashapp, its founders hope it’ll break boring rules surrounding current fintech startups and change how regular people think about payment technology.
Abeg makes gifting money and splitting bills between friends easier. Got a frighteningly huge bar tab after that TGIF party? You can contribute to the bill by Abeg-ging it.
You can also buy airtime, pay bills, and link your social media accounts to find Abeg users on Twitter or Instagram.
Other unique features you can find on the Abeg app include a Giveaway option, Ajo (a group saving tool), Cliques (for your bill splitting) and loans. The last three are still in the pipeline though.
Fidelity Bank is set to give out N159 million in its GAIM 6 promo. …
Zenith Tech Fair 4.0 has concluded, with hackathon winners receiving N77.5M in cash prizes. Glamtush…
Davido has received a luxury car from an auto firm for his 32nd birthday. …
Simon Ekpa, a Finnish-Nigerian separatist agitator and self-proclaimed Prime Minister of the Biafra Republic Government…
Accuses detractors of peddling news of alleged governorship ambition. Speaker of the Lagos State…
Simon Ekpa and four others have been arrested in Finland over terrorism activities. Glamtush…