QUOTE
Everyone who is offered employment from a Shell company, whether directly or indirectly, is always required to go through a formal recruitment process.
There have been incidents where fraudsters pretend to recruit on behalf of Shell or where people claim to work for, or be affiliated to Shell. One way to recognise their scam emails is to check the email address: because these mails are usually not sent from a Shell email account they often do not end with “@shell.com” but for example, “yahoo.com” or “hotmail.com”. Very often they also use poor English or, at some stage, request money from the recipient.
We recommend that you do not respond to these scam emails or any email you do not trust and never disclose your personal or financial details to anyone you do not know. If you receive such proposals, we would advise you to contact your local police and provide them with all information you may have from the senders.
There have been incidents where fraudsters pretend to recruit on behalf of Shell or where people claim to work for, or be affiliated to Shell. One way to recognise their scam emails is to check the email address: because these mails are usually not sent from a Shell email account they often do not end with “@shell.com” but for example, “yahoo.com” or “hotmail.com”. Very often they also use poor English or, at some stage, request money from the recipient.
We recommend that you do not respond to these scam emails or any email you do not trust and never disclose your personal or financial details to anyone you do not know. If you receive such proposals, we would advise you to contact your local police and provide them with all information you may have from the senders.
Mar 8 2012, 11:23 PM
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