Paraiba World investors can't get their money out. For almost a month now, the scheme has stopped paying withdrawals.

I first heard about the problem earlier this week from a reader. Another source confirmed the same issue, sharing screenshots from a recent company webinar where members openly complained about missing payments. Across Facebook groups and TrustPilot, the story repeats: affiliates request their funds and get nothing.

One investor blamed banking problems. That explanation doesn't hold up under scrutiny.

Paraiba World pitches itself as a "unique private bank" operating under a Mwali banking license. Mwali is part of the Union of Comoros, an island nation off Africa's east coast. On June 17th, the Central Bank of Comoros released a warning about illegal offshore banking operations. They published a list of websites issuing fake licenses.

Paraiba World's license came through one of those websites. The Central Bank was explicit: every license on that registry is fraudulent.

The timing matters. Just weeks before the Central Bank's warning, Paraiba World pushed out a new initiative called Trillant, marketed as "the next phase." Trillant comes with its own in-house cryptocurrency called Trillon, supposedly a stable coin Paraiba World would control.

The picture becomes clear when you look at the May 2022 Luna and Terra crypto collapse. That's when Paraiba World's money ran dry. The company needed a lifeline, so it created one. By shifting from USD to an in-house cryptocurrency, Paraiba World could theoretically keep running the scheme longer. Members would hold digital tokens instead of demanding real dollars.

Except affiliates still want actual payouts. They want to cash out their balances, whether in USD or Trillon. The withdrawal backlog suggests Paraiba World simply doesn't have the money anymore.

The company's leader, Erich Ely, hasn't acknowledged any problems publicly. Instead, expect excuses and delays—the standard playbook when a Ponzi scheme hits its breaking point.

Paraiba World built its reputation on being a private bank with real licensing and real returns. It was neither of those things. The license was fake. The returns came from new money flowing in, not from legitimate banking operations. And now that money has stopped flowing.

This is how Ponzi schemes end: slowly at first with excuses, then suddenly when there's nothing left to pay out.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is Paraiba World and why are investors experiencing withdrawal issues?
Paraiba World presents itself as a private banking entity operating under a Mwali banking license from the Union of Comoros. Since late June, the platform has suspended withdrawal payments for approximately one month, affecting numerous affiliates and investors who report missing funds despite repeated requests.

What evidence supports the withdrawal problems at Paraiba World?
Multiple sources document the crisis through direct investor testimonies, screenshots from company webinars showing member complaints, and widespread reports across Facebook groups and TrustPilot. Affected individuals consistently describe unsuccessful withdrawal attempts and lack of communication from the company regarding payment delays.

Is Paraiba World's banking license legitimate?
Paraiba World operates under a Mwali banking license from the Union of Comoros, an island nation off East Africa's coast. However, the Central Bank of Comoros issued warnings regarding


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