
Dan
5 posts




I’m from Ethiopia, and I want to speak on behalf of the millions of Ethiopians who rely on Binance P2P in their daily lives. Before moving to ban Binance P2P trading, I urge you to fully consider the consequences of such a decision. The current economic crisis was not created by ordinary citizens or P2P users. It is the result of failed government policies, reckless fiscal decisions, and years of economic mismanagement that have driven inflation to devastating levels. For many of us, Binance P2P is not speculation, it is survival. It has become a vital financial tool for freelancers, small business owners, remote workers, traders, and countless young Ethiopians whose livelihoods now depend on access to peer-to-peer exchange. Restricting or banning it would not solve the structural failures of the economy. It would only punish ordinary people for problems they did not create. Our government must be held accountable for the economic instability it has produced, rather than shifting blame onto citizens seeking practical alternatives to protect their income and preserve their financial independence. Banning Binance P2P would not be economic reform. It would be a direct attack on financial access, personal freedom, and the civil rights of Ethiopians already struggling under severe economic pressure. We are not asking for privilege. We are asking for fairness, accountability, and the right to access the financial tools that allow us to survive.

