Sham African Kingdoms Federation Phony Websites set up to Trick Confuse the Navigating Internet Public.
July 03, 2012 -- Updated 1129 GMT
Document Summary
People who are searching the Web for information on the legendary Queen of Sheba often found themselves at the door of a site known as imperialafrica.net posing as an African sovereign entity related somewhat to the late empire of Sheba. The site has a temting name such as "The Sovereign Imperial House of Ra"-But nothing of thar site is affiliated with a known African Royal House or a constitute African State Organization endorsed by international law or treaty as it is ofen the case. New technolgy has made it possible to invent new Federal government which exist only in Cyberspace. Why bother with a small-time scam; when you can run a mega scam based on an overall nation! APO Report
Confidence Trickster Debra Amelia George-Kasambura aka Grace Aluma aka Self-styled "Queen"of Shebah Latest Scam-imperialafrica.com
Royal Impostor:Grace Aluma aka Debra Amelia George Kasambura aka self-styled Queen Shebah |
Throughout history, royal
dynasties have dominated countries and empires around the world. Kings, queens,
emperors, chiefs, pharaohs, czars -- whatever title they ruled by, monarchs
have shaped institutions, rituals, and cultures in every time period and every
corner of the globe. The Queen of Sheba - an exotic and mysterious woman of
power - is immortalised in the world's great religious works, where she is
viewed as the embodiment of Divine Wisdom . In Africa and Arabia her tale has
been told and retold in many lands. Many historians believe that the
Queen of Sheba was the ruler of an ancient land known as Saba .This was the
home of the Sabaens, who lived in the southwest corner of Arabia, in
present-day Yemen. The Sabaeans Semitic in origin, are believed to have been
descendents of the Cush of the Bible. Numerous legends refer to the
female-centered clans, matriarchal practices, and matrilineal inheritance. Since
Sheba was a center of astronomical wisdom life involved worship of the Sun and
Moon. The kingdom gradually declined. It finally broke
up in the sixth century after the collapse of a huge dam at
Marib, the Sabaen capital.
People
who are searching the Web for information on the legendary Queen of Sheba often
found themselves at the door of a site known as imperialafrica.com or imperialafrica.net posing as an
African sovereign states organization related somewhat through a rather confusing self-made genealogy to the late empire of Sheba.
The site has a grandiose and 'colorful' name such as “The
Sovereign Imperial House of Ra,” —.of Her Imperial Majesty Queen Shebah Sai Ra III and even a presumable NGO known as The Royal Kingdoms Imperial House Foundation-But nothing
of this site is affiliated with a
known African royal house or a constitute African state organization endorsed
by international law or treaty as it is often the case . New technology has
made it possible to invent new federal government which exist only in
Cyberspace. The world's best-known of them all being the "Dominion of
Melchizedek", a California-based scam which in recent years has spread its
tentacles across the Pacific, Latin America, and even Europe.
Federal authorities determined that ex-convicted con artist,
Grace Aluma aka Debra Amelia George –Kasambura a native of Trinidad and Tobego is behind the new “online nation” of Sheba. The woman
who more so often styles herself as the Queen of Shebah is infact a
notorious confidence trickster behind a host of counteless financial frauds. Numerous investors have
been victimized by false investment and employment
scams perpertated through the African Kingdoms Federation Network for over a decade.
Royal pretenders and crown claimants are not a new thing, however, as royalty and monarchy are driven to the periphery of society, it has become much easier for frauds and false-claimants to make themselves accepted. Particularly with royal houses that have been out of power for many centuries, or for those outside of Europe, particularly in Africa and Asia, it becomes much easier for a phony pretender to pass themselves off as the genuine article because knowledge of such royal houses is so limited, even among monarchist circles perhaps because most have immensely large families which tend to discourage serious genealogical research. In some cases, these people are mostly out for money, in others it is simply a desire for recognition and adulation, and in probably the most cases they involve the thirst by so many for titles of nobility and orders of knighthood to feed their own vanity. Each one who receives such an "honor" then become (usually) staunch defenders of the claimant, no matter how ridiculous they may be, because if they are discredited, the grounds for the title before their name or the medal on their chest is also discredited
If you have been in contact with anybody that claims
to represent the African Kingdoms Federaton and offering you such things as diplomatic
appointments, titles of nobility, business licenses or other sham scheme-be aware-
Visit the website and read the history and no matter how carefully you look on an atlas,
you won't find the African Kingdoms Federation anywhere other than on the
internet.
Created
by the con artist presumably for other cons, the African Kingdoms Federation may be little more than an
attempt to defraud or swindle the general internet –navigating public.
Why
bother with a small-time scam, when you can run a mega scam based on an overall nation! Some fraud artists have realized this, and there has lately been a
proliferation of Cyber-Nations bogus organizations.
These particular
cyber-scams often have several things in common as reported in a resent study :.
- First, none of these cyber-scams have bona fide claims to territory. Instead, they have claims which are patently crazy, such as to Antarctica, or they claim land which has long been claimed by an existing, legitimate nation.
- Second, none of the governmental operations of the cyber-scams are actually conducted on the territory which its claims. Instead, most governmental operations take place in the United States or some other recognized country.
- Third, the cyber-scam's government is not derived from the governance of any peoples, but instead was created out of thin air by the fraud artists.
- Fourth, all of these cyber-scams make wildly misleading claims about having been recognized by a major nation, or having "de facto" recognition from such major nation. But to the contrary, the law enforcement bodies of the major nation will probably have issued warnings about this scam and in some case not have even heard of them
Has any country
appointed an official Ambassador or Consul to the African Continent Kingdoms Federation
other than their own self-styled ambassorship and order of knighthood?
If your country has
not established formal diplomatic relations with the alleged organization, it
is a giant red flag that you are dealing with a scam, and cause alone not to
deal with the impostors. These scams
will present a lot of alleged evidence that they have been
"recognized" or "de facto recognized" or similar nonsense,
but they will be hard-pressed to prove legitimacy in the absence of an official
Ambassador from your home country - meaning that you should not deal with them,
period.