logo
Chinese model missing in Thailand rescued, embassy warns of shady job offers

Chinese model missing in Thailand rescued, embassy warns of shady job offers

Bangkok Post2 days ago
BEIJING - A Chinese national who went missing in Thailand after accepting a photoshoot job has been rescued, according to China's embassy in Bangkok, which cautioned Chinese citizens against simply accepting job offers.
The embassy said in a statement that the rescue of a person with the surname Zhong was a joint effort of various parties but did not release details. The embassy did not give the person's full name or reveal their gender.
China's state-backed local media reported on Friday that a 23-year-old Chinese man by the surname Zhong had been tricked and trafficked into Myanmar after arriving in Thailand for a magazine cover photoshoot in early June.
His sister, who received a suspicious call from him weeks ago when he was in an unidentified location in Myanmar, had reported him missing to police in Guangzhou and Bangkok, Chinese state broadcaster CCTV said.
The embassy in Bangkok warned Chinese citizens to be vigilant against dubious "high-paying jobs" overseas, clarifying that Thailand requires foreign nationals to obtain appropriate permits to work there.
The warning comes as concerns about human trafficking and fraudulent employment schemes targeting Chinese nationals abroad grow.
Criminal networks have trafficked hundreds of thousands of people to scam compounds across Southeast Asia, many along the Thai-Myanmar border, where victims are forced to work in illegal online schemes, according to the United Nations.
The latest incident echoes a similar case that caught national interest in January, when a 31-year-old Chinese actor was duped into a film job in Thailand only to be kidnapped and taken to an online scam compound in Myanmar to work. He was eventually freed by Thai police.
After that case, China and Thailand agreed to set up a coordination centre in Bangkok to investigate and combat the scam complexes.
The Chinese embassy in Myanmar published a long notice on its WeChat account on Friday addressing the "emergence of new telecommunication network fraud methods".
It listed tips and 20 key phrases to look out for, aimed at educating the public in identifying frauds.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Car found burnt out in southern Thailand
Car found burnt out in southern Thailand

Bangkok Post

time8 hours ago

  • Bangkok Post

Car found burnt out in southern Thailand

NARATHIWAT – A parked car without an owner was found destroyed by fire in Rueso district of this southern Thai province on Saturday night, with an investigation underway into whether the vehicle was used as a car bomb. The Rueso Police Station was informed at 9pm of a fire consuming a sedan car, parked 300 metres away from the Balo bridge in Ban Bue Jo village 5 in tambon Sawo, said Pol Col Komsan Theekhakan, a deputy superintendent for investigation at the station. Police, military and officers from the provincial administrative department inspected the scene and found the fire was dying out, leaving only charred remains of the car. No locals near the scene claimed to be the car owner, said the authorities. After the inspection, the vehicle was identified as a grey Nissan Sylphy 1.8, with almost-destroyed Bangkok licence plate 1กอ 397. Meanwhile, the Southern Border Provinces Police Operation Center (SBPPOC) on Friday had issued a warning of two sedans suspected of being used for car bomb attacks. A Nissan Sylphy was one of the vehicles listed in the warning, and the other was a grey Toyata Vios. Both were reportedly purchased by insurgents. The alert also named six high-risk districts in the South—Raman in Yala province and Muang, Rueso, Tak Bai, Su-ngai Padi and Su-ngai Kolok in Narathiwat. Officials were instructed to carefully check vehicle identification numbers in the provinces as they could be painted over or swapped. The Explosive Ordnance Disposal and forensic teams were deployed to examine the scene of the fire and trace the possible route of the burnt vehicle, said Pol Lt Gen Piyawat Chalermsri, commissioner of Provincial Police Region 9. Reports from military sources also cautioned that the insurgents may have set the blaze to trick the authorities into an ambush, with the real attack set elsewhere. The authorities said that although the destroyed car's details matched with the one in the warning issued by the SBPPOC, a detailed investigation was continuing to verify if it was the same.

Chinese group flees Pattaya hotel after compatriot's fatal fall
Chinese group flees Pattaya hotel after compatriot's fatal fall

Bangkok Post

time12 hours ago

  • Bangkok Post

Chinese group flees Pattaya hotel after compatriot's fatal fall

PATTAYA: Police were hunting for a group of Chinese people who fled a hotel with belongings and equipment, including computers, in several vehicles after a Chinese man fell to his death there on Friday afternoon. The incident happened at the hotel in North Pattaya at 1.55pm on Friday. CCTV footage showed the Chinese man in a black shirt and shorts fall on his back. The man then sat up before falling down. Seconds later another man in a red shirt ran to the body. He stared at the body for less than a minute and ran back into the hotel. At 2.06pm or about 10 minutes after the fall, CCTV footage showed a group of Chinese men and women rushed out from the hotel with belongings and equipment, including computers. At 2.17pm six vehicles including a Mercedes-Benz car arrived at the hotel. Some Chinese people left the hotel with their computers in the vehicles. Others walked out of the hotel with rucksacks. According to police sources, investigators were trying to locate the Chinese escapees from CCTV footage. The dead Chinese man was identified as Liu Song, 24. He fell from the sixth floor of the hotel, where there are 16 rooms. Police found signs of urgent attempts to move out of the rooms.

Chinese group fled Pattaya hotel after compatriot's fatal fall
Chinese group fled Pattaya hotel after compatriot's fatal fall

Bangkok Post

time16 hours ago

  • Bangkok Post

Chinese group fled Pattaya hotel after compatriot's fatal fall

PATTAYA: Police were hunting for a group of Chinese people who fled a hotel with belongings and equipment including computers on several vehicles after a Chinese man fell to death there on Friday afternoon. The fall happened at the hotel in North Pattaya at 1.55pm on Friday. CCTV footage showed the Chinese man in black cloth and shorts fell on his back. The man then sat up before falling down. Seconds later another man in a red shirt ran to the body. He stared at the body for less than a minute and ran back into the hotel. At 2.06pm or about 10 minutes after the fall, CCTV footage showed a group of Chinese men and women rushed out from the hotel with belongings and equipment including computers. At 2.17pm six vehicles including a Mercedes-Benz car arrived at the hotel. Some Chinese people left the hotel with their computers on the vehicles. Others walked out of the hotel with rucksacks. According to police sources, investigators were trying to locate the Chinese escapees from CCTV footage. The dead Chinese man was identified as Liu Song, 24. He fell from the sixth floor of the hotel where there are 16 rooms. Police found traces of urgent attempts to move out of the rooms.

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