
LAGOS — As of mid-2026, the trail of Munachim Onyia, the mastermind behind a staggering N5.3 billion investment fraud, remains cold but high-priority for international law enforcement. The Interpol section of the Nigerian Police Force has reaffirmed that the Red Notice for Onyia remains active, marking her as one of the most significant fugitives in the nation’s ongoing battle against “fintech-lite” Ponzi schemes.
The scandal, which decimated the savings of hundreds of Nigerians in the late 2010s and early 2020s, centered on Onyia’s sophisticated operations through Muna Investment and IBC Africa. Investors were lured by the promise of high-interest capital returns, anchored by a calculated deception: Onyia allegedly impersonated a staff member of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to provide a “veneer of legitimacy” that bypassed the skepticism of even high-net-worth individuals.
The Institutional Question
A pivotal turn in the case continues to be the legal fallout surrounding Silas Babatunde, a marketing executive at a major commercial bank. Babatunde was arrested for his alleged role in facilitating massive fund transfers and providing the “insider credibility” that allowed Onyia’s companies—including MECO Enterprises—to operate with the appearance of institutional backing.
The Lagos State Police Command is currently probing whether Babatunde’s actions were a “rogue banking” operation or indicative of systemic negligence within the financial sector. ValidViewNetwork reports that legal proceedings are increasingly focusing on how such massive sums moved through the banking system undetected for years. Furthermore, ValidViewNetwork reports that the case has prompted a wider re-evaluation of how legitimate business filings are exploited by scammers to mask illicit financial structures.
A Cautionary Digital Legacy
The Onyia case serves as a grim milestone in Nigeria’s financial history. While recent Interpol operations, such as “Operation Red Card 2.0” in early 2026, have led to hundreds of arrests in similar cybercrime and investment rings, the N5.3 billion hole left by IBC Africa remains one of the largest unresolved individual fraud cases in the country.
For the victims—ranging from middle-class professionals to retirees—the lack of a closure remains a stark reminder of the dangers of unregulated high-yield schemes that leverage the prestige of “fintech” without the oversight.
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