
Sri Lanka deports dozens of Chinese cybercrime suspects
The suspects were expelled for violating the terms of their tourist visas and fined around $250 each.
"They were arrested by police in October over allegations that they were carrying out online scams targeting international banks," a senior immigration official who asked for anonymity as he was not authorised to speak to media without permission, told AFP.
He said the group, including 13 women, was flown to the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou on a chartered SriLankan Airlines flight on Friday morning accompanied by Sri Lankan police and Chinese security escorts.
Meanwhile, Sri Lankan police said a court in the central Kandy district ordered the electronic devices seized from the group to be handed to Chinese authorities.
Those deported were among around 230 Chinese men and women detained in October on cybercrime allegations, with the remainder awaiting legal proceedings.
The Chinese embassy said at the time that Beijing's crackdown on cybercriminals at home may have pushed some to go abroad.
Last year, police arrested another 200 suspects, mainly Indians, who were also accused of operating online financial scams. - AFP

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
35 minutes ago
- The Sun
Retrial opens for S. Korean woman who bit off attempted rapist's tongue
SEOUL: A South Korean court has reopened a decades-old case involving a woman who was convicted for defending herself against sexual assault in 1964. The retrial follows renewed attention from the #MeToo movement, which inspired Choi Mal-ja to challenge her past conviction. Choi was 19 when a 21-year-old man attacked her in Gimhae, forcing his tongue into her mouth. Court records show she bit off part of his tongue to escape. While the attacker received a suspended sentence for trespassing and intimidation, Choi was convicted of grievous bodily harm and given a suspended 10-month prison term. The original court ruled her actions 'exceeded the reasonable bounds of legally permissible self-defence.' Decades later, the #MeToo movement, which gained global traction in 2017, encouraged Choi to seek justice. South Korea's women's rights protests have since led to legal reforms, including stricter penalties for sexual crimes. Choi filed for a retrial in 2020, but lower courts initially rejected her petition. After years of appeals, the Supreme Court ordered a retrial in 2024. 'For 61 years, the state made me live as a criminal,' Choi told reporters outside the Busan District Court. She hopes the case will inspire a future free from sexual violence. The prosecution has now requested the court to overturn her conviction. A verdict is expected in September. - AFP


New Straits Times
2 hours ago
- New Straits Times
Spa in mall busted for offering sex services, gambling
KUALA LUMPUR: A spa operating in a shopping mall along Jalan Loke Yew here had been masquerading as a legitimate business under a licensed wellness centre while secretly offering sex services and organising gambling activities. The outlet, which began operations earlier this month, was exposed in a raid at 3.15am yesterday by the Federal anti-vice, gambling and secret societies division (D7) and Cheras district police. Acting Kuala Lumpur police chief Datuk Mohamed Usuf Jan Mohamad said 54 individuals between the ages of 19 and 54, were detained during the operation. Those arrested comprised five local men, four local women, seven Chinese nationals, three Bangladeshi men, six Myanmar men, as well as 29 foreign women, including 19 from China and 10 from Myanmar. Usuf said the foreign women were employed as guest relations officers (GROs) and allegedly offered sexual services at RM1,700 per session. "Among those arrested was a local woman who organised the gambling sessions while four Chinese nationals and three locals were caught in the act of gambling," he said in a statement today. Police also seized various promotional materials for massages and spa services, business receipts, condoms, mobile phones, lubricants and gambling paraphernalia. "The main business is the spa. However, the gambling activities were arranged for the owner's business associates and not meant for the public," he added. Usuf said the outlet only accepted walk-in customers for massages or sexual services. All those detained, along with the seized items, were taken to the Cheras district police headquarters for further action.


The Star
2 hours ago
- The Star
Myanmar junta drone crashes over Thai border
BANGKOK: A Myanmar junta drone targeting anti-coup fighters crashed over the border in Thailand, the kingdom's military said, prompting an official rebuke over hazardous spillover from the civil war. Western Thailand regularly suffers ramifications from the conflict that has raged in Myanmar since the military toppled the country's elected civilian government in 2021. Deserting junta troops, fleeing civilian refugees and desperate economic migrants often make unsanctioned crossings of the countries' 2,400km (1,500 mile) frontier. Thailand's military said it found the "kamikaze drone" on Monday (July 21) in a forest in Tak Province, 15km inside the Thai border. "No civilians were injured or killed, and no property damage was reported," said a Tuesday night statement. "Initial investigations suggest the drone belonged to the Myanmar military and was intended for an attack on resistance forces, but lost control and crashed on the Thai side." The military statement said a disposal team "neutralised the explosive materials" and a "formal protest" has been lodged about the incident through a border dialogue organisation. Myanmar's junta and its myriad rebel opponents are both increasingly relying on drones to gain a strategic edge in the civil war, which has now ground on for more than four years. Myanmar ranks third globally -- behind only Ukraine and Russia -- for the number of drone sorties recorded by monitor organisation Armed Conflict Location and Event Data (ACLED), according to a report this month. "The accessibility, ease of modification, and cost-effectiveness of drones enable both resistance groups and the military to achieve military objectives while minimising combat casualties," the report said. - AFP