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[MUSIC PLAYING]
THOMAS MORTON: Hi, it's Thomas.
We're in Ghana, the internet capital of Africa.
If you ever wonder what happens to computers that you
donate to one of those green e-recycling programs, this is
basically it.
Kids from the north of Ghana come to this junkyard during
the summer to break computers down for scrap and also inhale
things that will probably end up giving them cancer of the
everything.
THOMAS MORTON: Most of the computers are only worth the
dollar or two of copper you can melt out of them.
But occasionally you harvest something useful, like a hard
drive or a processor, which you can sell at the little
flea market area next to the charnel grounds.
THOMAS MORTON: Ah, OK.
If you're an especially savvy shopper, you can actually put
together a full working computer here, one ready to
connect you to the fastest internet in all of Africa.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
THOMAS MORTON: Ghana puts a lot of stock in computers.
Their internet is directly linked to Great Britain's, and
they are billboards all over the capital, extolling the
virtues of personal computing.
Ghana already is sort of the top dog of West Africa, where
most of its neighbors have been plagued by war and
poverty since independence, Ghana's had almost 50 years of
stability and growth.
Right now they're hoping foreign investment will
bolster a computer industry here, which will permanently
make them the tech capital of West Africa.
So far it hasn't quite materialized, but what has
materialized is a thriving underground economy of fraud
and witchcraft called Sakawa.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
[MUSIC PLAYING]
THOMAS MORTON: Sakawa dates back to Nigeria's oil boom in
the late '70s.
Ghanaians came into the country to take jobs in the
oil fields, and the locals taught them their favorite
pastime, the pen-pal scam.
The way it works is you write to someone in America or
England, tell them about an investment opportunity you
have, or just straight up ask them for money, and they send
it to you, and that's it-- scam over.
Eventually the Nigerian government deported all the
Ghanaian guest workers back home, and they brought the
pen-pal scam with them.
Then they combined it with magic.
THOMAS MORTON: As the internet took hold in Ghana, the
pen-pal scam was adapted to email.
Then scammers started hooking up with hackers online and
incorporating things like credit card fraud into their
scams, which became
increasingly complex and lucrative.
We kind of like the idea of making a living off the back
American stupidity, so we hooked up with a Sakawa gang,
led by a young Ghanaian named Sefa.
THOMAS MORTON: And now the term just gets used--
THOMAS MORTON: --for everything.
THOMAS MORTON: Sefa's a Sakawa success story.
He's used his old scam earnings to pay for business
school and has made a nice living for himself by Ghanaian
standards, although he still has to cross a stream of urine
every night to get into his house.
Sakawa comprises any number of online scams, but the majority
boil down to two basic types.
One, you pretend you're a sexy girl, convince someone to fall
in love with you, and then they send you money.
This is called the romance scam.
The other one is, you use a stolen or forged credit card
number to buy something online.
Then you have it shipped to someone in the West who sends
you money for it.
That one's called the shopping scam.
These two scams sort of work like templates.
Once you nail down the basics of them, you can start
combining them and adding all sorts of personalized details
until your mark feels like he's in the middle of some
elaborate international business scheme and not just
emailing back and forth with an African kid on a laptop.
The thing with Sakawa is while it's essentially free money,
it isn't easy money.
To find someone gullible enough to fall for your
shtick, you have to spend hours and hours emailing
hundreds and thousands of random addresses.
THOMAS MORTON: In America, frustrated gamblers will kiss
a lucky penny or pray to Saint Bernardino for help.
Likewise, frustrated Sakawa boys turn to religion when
they're down on their luck.
Only in their case, turning to religion means driving out
into the bush and paying a juju priest
for magic email powers.
[DRUMMING]
THOMAS MORTON: I'm definitely in Africa right now.
Juju is the local term for what fancy anthropology types
call traditional African religion.
In the same way that Hinduism is actually more or less a
collection of thousands of local deities and rituals,
juju is basically an umbrella for any West African religious
practice that isn't obviously Christianity or Islam--
or Scientology.
One aspect central to all forms of juju is that the
spirit world is morally neutral.
As in the gods don't give a shit what you and I do to each
other as long as they get paid.
This makes juju perfect for Sakawa.
If you want a leg up on the competition, you get a juju
priest to barter with the spirits, and then they give
you powers.
So the point of the juju ceremony we're dancing in
isn't to win converts or teach some sort of a
lesson like in church.
It's to demonstrate the priests ins with the spirit
world and advertise his powers.
Powers like channeling a god who can't be cut by knifes.
Or channeling another god, who likes throwing eggs.
Why is he throwing eggs?
THOMAS MORTON: Why, why does he throw them?
THOMAS MORTON: Oh.
Waste of powers.
The flip side to all this is once you make a deal with the
gods, you're bound to their terms.
If you piss them off or default on payment to your
juju priest, you end up with the opposite of powers, like
bad luck or AIDS.
On top of that the payment process itself
can be pretty tricky.
THOMAS MORTON: Westerners may find stuff like magic eggs and
tampon eating a little hard to swallow, but it's serious
business over here.
And not just with like superstitious bumpkins.
Even educated, cosmopolitan folks like
Sefa believe in this.
THOMAS MORTON: Besides, is of any of this really that much
weirder than shit like communion or circumcisions?
[CRYING]
THOMAS MORTON: That part was a little rough.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
THOMAS MORTON: While Sakawa originally referred to a very
specific type of internet fraud mixed with juju, then it
went on to mean any internet crime involving witchcraft,
and now it's kind of evolved into its own full-blown
subculture.
So there's Sakawa music, Sakawa movies, Sakawa cars, a
Sakawa style of dressing.
THOMAS MORTON: Right now Ghana's in the throes of
Sakawa mania.
It's in all the papers and movie theaters.
It's bigger than rap.
I'm looking for Sakawa movies.
Oh, cool, here's number three.
If you want a glimpse at just how deeply Sakawa's penetrated
the public consciousness, check this out.
They're already up to "Sakawa Boys 8," and the series just
started last year.
We're on our way to meet a guy who makes films about Sakawa.
His name is Socrate Safo.
He's actually like the Martin Scorsese of Ghanaian internet,
fraud-based, gangster films.
The Ghanaian film industry, or Ghallywood, operates on kind
of a "more is more" principle of movie making.
They crank out hundreds of titles a year, most of them
shot on zero budget in as quickly as a couple weeks from
start to finish.
This speed doesn't do much for production values, but it does
allow them to respond to current events and to cater
their subject matter to their countrymen's exact interest.
THOMAS MORTON: Realistic.
Things drawn from real life.
-Ain't you got nothing better to do?
You asked for it.
[LAUGHTER]
THOMAS MORTON: Socrate's movie touched a nerve in national
psyche and brought the issue of Sakawa to life for a lot of
Ghanaians who otherwise wouldn't have heard of it.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
THOMAS MORTON: Since being thrust into the mainstream,
though, Sakawa has drawn a huge outcry from government
officials, tabloids, and Christian preachers, whose
billboards in Accra are almost as ubiquitous as ads for
computer classes and juju priests.
THOMAS MORTON: While the furor over Sakawa dominates the
tabloids and pulpits, the focus is all on black magic
and blood debts and Sakawa boys turning each other into
goats and snakes.
None of it tackles the root of the problem, the fact that
over a third of young Ghanaians are unemployed, and
what jobs there are are filled by corrupt government
officials and their cousins.
THOMAS MORTON: Up until now the government's been more
than happy to turn a blind eye to Sakawa since it's basically
providing regular work for people that they can't.
There are also persistent rumors that Sakawa isn't just
limited to gangs of teenage delinquents, but is actually a
popular sideline among policemen, soldiers and
politicians.
THOMAS MORTON: Now that's Sakawa's threatening Ghana's
business reputation, the government's cracking down.
And them and the press have started a moral panic over it.
Just like gangsta rappers in the early '90s, Sakawa boys
have gone from objects of sort of cultural fascination to
scapegoats for all their country's ills.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
THOMAS MORTON: The end of Sakawa may not necessarily
bring juju Armageddon to Ghana, but it will leave a
bunch of angry young men without any source of steady
income, which is arguably even scarier.
On a lighter note, Ghana just discovered oil off its shore,
so maybe that'll solve all their problems.
[MUSIC PLAYING]