logo
Cambodia arrests 1,000 in cyberscam crackdown

Cambodia arrests 1,000 in cyberscam crackdown

PHNOM PENH: Cambodian authorities have arrested more than 1,000 people in raids on internet scam centres, police said Wednesday, as Prime Minister Hun Manet ordered a crackdown on cybercrime sweatshops.
The United Nations has described Southeast Asia as the "ground zero" of scam centres, where workers typically use romance or business cons to defraud social media users of an estimated US$40 billion annually.
Hun Manet issued a directive made public on Tuesday, telling law enforcement and the military "to prevent and crack down on online scams", warning they risk losing their jobs if they fail to take action.
Over three days, authorities raided sites across the country, including in the capital Phnom Penh, the Thai border city of Poipet and the coastal city of Sihanoukville.
Just over 1,000 suspects were detained, according to police reports, which continued to be announced late on Wednesday night.
The vast majority of the reported arrests were foreign nationals – including at least 271 Indonesians, 213 Vietnamese and 75 Taiwanese.
Many of those freed from Southeast Asian scam centres say they were trafficked or lured there under false pretences.
Abuses in Cambodia's scam centres are happening on a "mass scale", Amnesty International said in a report published last month.
There are at least 53 scam compounds in Cambodia where organised criminal groups carry out human trafficking, forced labour, child labour, torture, deprivation of liberty and slavery, the report said.
In March, Cambodia deported 119 Thais – among 230 foreign nationals detained during raids on alleged cyber scam centres in Poipet.
The UN Office on Drugs and Crime warned in April that the scam industry was expanding outside hotspots in Southeast Asia, with criminal gangs building up operations as far as South America, Africa, the Middle East, Europe and some Pacific islands.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NST Leader: Due diligence the key to uncover scams
NST Leader: Due diligence the key to uncover scams

New Straits Times

time7 hours ago

  • New Straits Times

NST Leader: Due diligence the key to uncover scams

SCAMMERS come in various forms. Fake dentists and doctors are common, but a bogus ambassador? Not of one country, but four. That is exactly what Harshvardhan Jain, a Uttar Pradesh native of Ghaziabad, near New Delhi, has been accused of being for the past decade. Arguably, he is the world's first bogus ambassador representing that many countries. There was another fake diplomat, interestingly in Ghaziabad, impersonating the high commissioner of Oman as the police there discovered. His bogus world came crashing when he was arrested on March 13, India's English daily The Hindu reported. Like all scammers, Jain was after money. Yes, money for jobs in the "countries" he was an ambassador of. All four were calling themselves micronations. We do not know if Jain looked and acted like a diplomat, but the posh building he rented, with foreign flags and a few luxury cars with diplomatic number plates parked in front, did the locals in. According to AFP, when the police raided his "embassy", they recovered US$53,500 worth of Indian rupees, doctored passports and forged documents bearing stamps of India's Foreign Ministry. There are several lessons that scammers like Jain are teaching us. Firstly, scams mutate. Early scams that reached our shores were emails from bogus Nigerian royals, willing to share their inheritance if we helped them pay to move the money overseas. When suspicions grew in tandem with the emails, there was no more request for money; just a plea for bank details so that the inheritance can be moved into our account. A clever attempt to get access to money without asking for it. A cleverer move was the African romance scams, with many Asian women, including Malaysians, losing their fortune in the process. Next were calls from fake courier companies claiming that our packages are stuck at Customs, but would be released if some payments are made to clear them. Then came the calls from bogus police officers and taxmen. Today, it is the turn of deepfake videos. Consider, too, this latest duping attempt from an inventive knave: an SMS stating "your WhatsApp is abnormal" and that the app would be shut down in 12 hours unless we click a link for help. The instruction to click is a dead giveaway. Plus, why SMS and not WhatsApp? But Jain takes the cake. He doesn't call. The victims walk into the "embassy" and get taken in by the facade mimicking the real, which brings us to the second lesson: vigilance, the art of being alert to signs of danger. Admittedly, it is not an easy thing to do, but not an impossible one either. Consider Jain's trickery. Granted, the swanky building with flags to boot and luxury cars with diplomatic number plates parked outside added to the believability score. But what "nations" was he a diplomat of? West Arctica, Seborga, Poulvia and Lodonia, clearly are non-existent states claiming to be micronations. Surely, a little due diligence would have uncovered it. Scams are all about money or its equivalent. This we know. The trick is to be aware of how the scammers gain access to either, the final lesson scammers unwittingly have left us with.

Cambodian Culture ministry condemn continued Thai attacks on Preah Vihear Temple
Cambodian Culture ministry condemn continued Thai attacks on Preah Vihear Temple

The Star

time12 hours ago

  • The Star

Cambodian Culture ministry condemn continued Thai attacks on Preah Vihear Temple

PHNOM PENH: The Cambodian Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts has issued an urgent statement condemning the 'continued and intensified shelling' of the Preah Vihear Temple by Thai armed forces, calling the attacks a direct assault on Cambodia's sovereignty and a violation of international laws protecting cultural heritage. In the strongly worded Sunday (July 27) statement, the ministry accused Thailand of endangering not only the structural integrity of the ancient temple — inscribed as a Unesco World Heritage Site in 2008 — but also the 'shared cultural heritage of humanity'. According to the ministry, large portions of the temple and its surrounding sacred landscape have suffered 'grave and unprecedented' damage. 'These renewed acts of aggression have placed the temple in grave and unprecedented danger,' the ministry said, adding that the destruction has undermined 'a symbol of Cambodia's national identity, historical continuity and spiritual heritage'. The ministry asserted that the attacks constitute blatant violations of several international instruments, including the 1954 Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict, the 1999 Second Protocol, the 1972 Unesco World Heritage Convention and the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC), under which intentional destruction of cultural heritage may be prosecuted as a war crime. It also noted Thailand's obligations as a state party to the International Coordinating Committee for the Conservation and Enhancement of the Temple of Preah Vihear, as established by a Unesco decision in 2014. The ministry called on Thailand to immediately halt all military operations targeting Preah Vihear Temple and its designated protected zones and to fully comply wit its legal obligations under the aforementioned treaties. In its appeal to the international community, the ministry urged Unesco, the UN and relevant cultural and human rights organisations to: Demand an immediate ceasefire and respect for Cambodia's sovereignty. Publicly condemn Thailand's continued aggression. Pursue diplomatic and legal measures to hold those responsible accountable. Deploy international observers to assess the damage and aid in site protection. The ministry affirmed it is meticulously documenting all instances of destruction and is prepared to pursue legal action through the ICC and other international legal forums to seek justice and reparations. 'The Kingdom of Cambodia remains steadfast in its commitment to defending its cultural heritage and upholding the principles of peace, justice and international law,' the statement concluded. Preah Vihear Temple, located atop a 525-metre cliff in the Dangrek Mountains, has long been a source of diplomatic tension between Cambodia and Thailand. This latest escalation marks a serious deterioration in bilateral relations and raises alarm over the protection of irreplaceable cultural landmarks amid armed conflict. - The Phnom Penh Post/ANN

Purchase a Vietnam bride for $10,000, but don't forget your $2,000 deposit
Purchase a Vietnam bride for $10,000, but don't forget your $2,000 deposit

Focus Malaysia

time14 hours ago

  • Focus Malaysia

Purchase a Vietnam bride for $10,000, but don't forget your $2,000 deposit

WHAT can be more horrifying than the most horrific horror movie? A normal human relationship of course. The fear of rejection. Rejection. Abusive relationships. You name it. That is why people have resorted to 'purchasing' relationships, aka Vietnam Brides. This isn't new but a recent viral video on Vietnam Brides in Singapore has brought the topic back into the limelight. According to Mark Lin who runs the bridal agency, a client is charged $10,000 for a bride, and a $2,000 deposit is required. Some of the 'brides' were introduced in the video, their age ranging from 19 to 22. Authentic brides or legalised prostitution? You decide. Hahaha bukan setakat labour diorang beli dari luar, bini pon kena import dari luar. It looks borderline unlawful matchmaking barely legal brides though. — Dibs (@adibhazlami) July 25, 2025 However, netizens were sceptical about this concept of purchasing a relationship instead of forming one. We are not surprised. Netizen @kingtawa23 said he knew an uncle selling Tau Foo Fah who once purchased a Vietnam bride. Apparently she ran away and he felt that it was just a waste of money. Another netizen claimed this was human trafficking. @army4769 added that this was a growing trend as the local Chinese girls have a lot of demand. 'In the area of my condominium, I can say that the majority of Chinese guys there marry Vietnamese and Thais. At first I thought they were mistresses but they were actually wives,' he said. Nerizen @fa_fart echoes his words, stating that Chinese guys are more likely to marry Vietnamese as Chinese girls are expensive. 'It is cheap to marry Malays but they have to convert,' he said. 'Mail-order bride is the word,' said @Solo_Level_27 succinctly. So is happily ever after just $10,000 away for the average male? Who knows. On another note, what drives these girls to become Vietnam brides? According to the website Girls Not Brides, child marriage in Vietnam continues to be influenced by deep-rooted gender inequality, where girls are often seen as less valuable than boys. Economic hardship further worsens the situation, especially among Vietnam's poorest communities. Statistics show that nearly 39% of girls from low-income households marry before turning 18, compared to just 1.4% among the wealthiest. For many families facing financial struggles, marrying off daughters is viewed as a means of economic survival. The risk is even higher for girls from ethnic minority groups, who tend to experience higher poverty levels. Education also plays a critical role. Two-thirds of women with no formal education were married before 18, in contrast to only 14.5% of those who completed upper secondary school. Cultural traditions further contribute to the issue. Arranged marriages are still widely practiced in Vietnam, with decisions often made by parents and community leaders. In some areas, customary laws continue to legitimise the marriage of underage girls with parental consent. Although prohibited by law, the practice of hai pu, or bride kidnapping, remains common among Hmong communities. In these cases, girls are forcibly taken from their homes and married without their consent. Additionally, social expectations and the fear of being labelled a 'leftover girl' create further pressure for girls to marry at a young age. —July 27, 2025 Main image: @adibhazlami

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store