
SE Asia trafficked scam victims free but far from home
Now, survivors of cyber-scam compounds dominate his time as founder of the Thailand-based Immanuel Foundation.
Hundreds of thousands of victims are trapped in cyber-crime scam farms that sprung up during the COVID-19 pandemic in Southeast Asia, according to the United Nations.
Conditions are reported to be brutal, with the detainees ruled by violence.
Photos on Jinnmonca's phone show victims with purple and blue bruises, bleeding wounds and even the lifeless body of someone who had been severely beaten or was dead.
He has received reports of seven killings from inside compounds this year alone and reports of other forced labourers killing themselves, worn out from waiting for help that may never arrive.
"They want to go back home," he said, and if they do not follow orders, the gang leaders will abuse them until they die.
"Some, when they cannot escape, they jump off the seventh or 10th floor. They want to die."
Criminal gangs cashed in on pandemic-induced economic vulnerability and even now, workers come from as far as Ethiopia and India, duped into thinking a paid-for journey to Thailand will yield a worthwhile employment opportunity.
Instead they spend their days tethered to technology, generating fake social media profiles and compelling stories to swindle money from unsuspecting people, contributing to a cyber-crime economy that accounted for $US8 ($A12) trillion in losses in 2023.
In February, under pressure from China after a well-known Chinese actor, Wang Xing, was trafficked, Myanmar authorities and the Thai government collaborated in the biggest rescue operation yet.
By shutting down the internet and stopping fuel supplies and electricity in Myawaddy, Myanmar, authorities were able to debilitate several compounds, leading to the release of more than 7,000 workers.
Their ordeal, however, is not yet over.
Many of them are waiting to be repatriated in holding centres where access to food and medicine is said to be scarce.
The Immanuel Foundation has rescued more than 2700 people since 2020.
"We bring them to hospital for a health check and then take them to talk to law enforcement," Jinnmonca said, as his phone vibrated for a third time in just 30 minutes.
The call was from one of his 12 staff members reporting that the team succeeded in extracting a Thai woman from a scam centre in Cambodia.
She was covered in scars from beatings but otherwise healthy, the team said.
Escaped workers say they were given little food or clean water and threatened with beatings or death if quotas were unmet.
For Palit, 42, a former clothing shop owner from northern Thailand, the risk of electric shock was never far away during his six-month detention.
He had been attracted to the promise of a high-paying administrative job in South Korea, but instead was flown to Mandalay in Myanmar.
Fearing he was being trafficked for his organs, it was a relief to know he could keep them, he said.
Instead, he was forced to spend his time creating fake profiles to engage a minimum of five people every day in online relationships.
"I would talk to the target like 'Baby please invest in this, you will get good profit,'" said Palit, who wanted only his first name disclosed.
Well known among forced labourers, Jinnmonca's personal Facebook pings with messages, typically four new people each day, begging for help and sharing stories like Palit's.
The cross-border nature of trafficking rescue makes the repatriation process difficult and slow, said Amy Miller, regional director for Southeast Asia at Acts of Mercy International, which supports survivors.
"They are complaining about the wait time," she said. "There are people who are sick that are maybe not getting treatment.
"It's just a tinder box ready to go up in flames."
The problem of how to process and provide for so many victims is deterring Myanmar's law enforcement from further rescue operations, Miller said, so the potential for future operations is unclear.
"I don't feel super confident that this is actually a reform of the compounds or that they're going to shut down," she said.
Jinnmonca said he believes the most effective way to protect against trafficking and the scams is to imprison the masterminds at the top.
"If (we do) not fix this problem, it will only double," he said.
Instead, he said, the workers are targeted by authorities.
When Palit, who is soft-spoken and quick to smile, was released from a scam centre in November 2023 alongside 328 other people, 10 of them were arrested.
They were accused of being complicit in cybercrime and kidnapping because their language skills gave them leadership roles in the compound's living quarters.
But they were victims as well, said Jinnmonca, and such arrests mean workers rescued from the clutches of criminal gangs in one country may face prison in another.
Hashtags

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

ABC News
6 hours ago
- ABC News
Thailand says it agrees in principle to a ceasefire deal with Cambodia which has been proposed by Malaysia
Thailand's government says it agrees in principle to a ceasefire deal with Cambodia and will consider the proposal put forward by Malaysia. The worst fighting between the rival nations in more than a decade has now killed at least 20 people and left dozens of others wounded. Some 130,000 people have been forced to find safety because of the fighting, which expanded along the disputed border during the second day of clashes. Both countries blame the other for starting the conflict, with Thailand warning the skirmishes could turn into all-out war. "It must be stated that throughout the day, Cambodian forces have continued their indiscriminate attacks on Thai territory," the Thai foreign ministry said in a post on X. Before the post, Cambodia had accused Thailand of agreeing to the ceasefire deal, before backtracking. Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Manet said Thailand's decision was "regrettable". On Friday evening, a Thailand military border commander declared martial law in eight districts on the frontier with Cambodia, citing "Cambodia's use of force to enter Thai territory". Fighting re-erupted before dawn on Friday, with clashes reported in 12 locations, up from six on Thursday, according to Thailand's military. It accused Cambodia of using artillery and Russian-made BM-21 rockets to attack areas that included schools and hospitals. "The deliberate targeting of civilians is a war crime and those responsible must be brought to justice," it said. Cambodia has no fighter aircraft and significantly less defence hardware and personnel. It has urged the UN Security Council to address what it says is Thailand's "unprovoked military aggression". It said Thailand's bombardments had caused "significant and visible damage" to the 11th century Preah Vihear temple, a UNESCO World Heritage Site that both countries have laid claim to for decades. Thailand's military called the allegation "a clear distortion of facts". Cambodia's government expressed outrage at what it said was the use of cluster munitions, calling it a clear violation of international law. Thailand's military said the country was not a party to the Convention on Cluster Munitions, but that it followed the principle of proportionality "to enhance explosive destruction capabilities against military targets only". People living near the conflict zones on both sides of the border have been forced to flee. Nut Sokkheng, 62, said she and her grandson were injured in fighting which broke out about 4km from Ta Moan, one of the disputed temples along the border. "I have suffered injuries on my left leg and my grandson broke his right leg. Please help him. He is young and still studies," she said. Nhib Saran, 62, said he was leaving home for an evacuation area after fighting came close to his home in Samrong district, Uddar Meanchey province. "I want to leave home, go far from the gunshots from Thailand because I am afraid … in this war, there have been big airstrikes. I am afraid of staying home, so I take my children out of the firing area," he said. Thai farmer Jeenjana Phapan fled her village with her three-year-old son after shells landed in the rice field behind their house. She left her husband behind to care for their cows and protect their home. "I hope my husband can hide if more shells come," she said. South-East Asia expert at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies think-tank, Andreyka Natalegawa, told the ABC neither country could afford a full-blown war. He said it was important to quickly get an independent fact-finder, or neutral observer, to get to the bottom of what sparked the latest round of violence "in a bid to bring these events to a more calm state." There has never been a war between two member states of the Association of South East Asian Nation (ASEAN) bloc, but he said this conflict presented a challenge to the institution. "There's a real impetus for parties like Malaysia, as well as other ASEAN member states, including Indonesia and Philippines, Singapore, to take a more firm stance and to actively engage with their counterparts on both sides in pursuit of seeking a resolution," Mr Natalegawa said. "This current crisis and the prospect of current skirmishes emerging into something greater poses a real dire challenge to the institution." Thailand had not shown interest in third-party mediation, despite saying it would consider Malaysia's peace proposal. Mr Natalegawa said that was in line with the country's previous desire to achieve a bilateral solution to tension. He said the ceasefire proposal was an important step by the ASEAN chair, Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim. "The question will just be whether there's any appetite on both sides to engage in this sort of mediation," he said. ABC/wires


Perth Now
7 hours ago
- Perth Now
Ukraine holding firm against Russia's summer push
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy insists Ukrainian forces are holding back Russia's concerted summer push to break through defences along parts of the front line, as Moscow intensifies its bombardment of Ukrainian cities. With the war now in its fourth year after Russia's February 2022 invasion of its neighbour, the effort is draining resources on both sides, although Russia has more resources and people to sustain its fight. Ukraine is seeking further support from Western partners. "They are not advancing. It's very tough for our guys out there. And it's tough everywhere," Zelenskiy told reporters. "It's also very hard for the Russians — and that's good for us." Russia has claimed the capture of some villages and hamlets in recent weeks, but no defensively stronger urban areas have fallen to its troops. Russian sabotage and reconnaissance groups have repeatedly attempted to stage minor incursions near Pokrovsk in the eastern Donetsk region to film symbolic footage, such as raising a Russian flag, but Ukrainian forces have repelled those efforts, Zelenskiy said. Zelenskiy described the situation in the northeastern Sumy border region as "much better" than in recent months, noting progress by Ukrainian forces over the past six weeks. Russia has also intensified its bombardment of Ukrainian cities, with the second-largest city Kharkiv, struck with a powerful glide bomb for a second straight day on Friday. Seven people were injured, officials said. On Thursday, 42 were injured. Joyce Msuya, the United Nations' deputy humanitarian chief, told the Security Council on Friday that Ukraine's humanitarian situation is deteriorating due to expanding Russian attacks on civilian areas across the country. "There is no safe place left in Ukraine," she said. Zelenskiy said Ukraine is working with international partners to secure 10 US-made Patriot air defence systems, which can shoot down missiles, with three already confirmed from Germany and Norway. The Trump administration will sell the systems, he said, but Ukraine's task is to find funding for all 10. Each system costs more than $US1 billion ($A1.5 billion). Ukraine is also seeking to obtain a licence to manufacture the Patriot systems itself. The Ukrainian leader expressed little hope for progress in direct talks between delegations from Russia and Ukraine, though he said the Kremlin envoys have begun discussing the possibility of a leaders' summit with Ukraine. "We need an end to the war, which probably begins with a meeting of leaders. It won't work any other way with (the Russians)," Zelenskiy said. The Kremlin, however, remained set against top-level talks before a potential comprehensive peace agreement is fleshed out. "A high-level meeting can and must put a final point in the settlement and seal the modalities and agreements that are yet to be worked out by experts," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Friday. "It's impossible to act otherwise." In domestic politics, Zelenskiy said public protests against changes earlier this week to Ukraine's anti-corruption law were "legitimate". The changes threatened the independence of anti-graft watchdogs and also drew rebukes from European Union officials and international rights groups, prompting Zelenskiy to propose new legislation to restore the independence of the anti-graft agencies. "It's very important that society speaks. I respect the opinion of society," Zelenskiy said. "People asked for changes. We responded." Demonstrators gathered for the third day on Thursday evening, but drew a smaller crowd. He said those agencies must be "truly independent," adding that "the most important thing in this war is the unity of our state. It is critical not to lose unity". However, the risk now remains that the Verkhovna Rada, Ukraine's parliament, will fail to approve the new bill, which could bring even larger crowds to the streets. Zelenskiy expressed confidence that it would pass in a vote scheduled for July 31.

ABC News
14 hours ago
- ABC News
NT government expands role of G4S private security guards to support overcrowded watch houses
In an expansion of private prison staff responsibilities in the Northern Territory, Department of Corrections employees have heard the duties performed by private security firm G4S will be increased. In March, the NT government signed a six-month contract with G4S to manage the transfer of Darwin prisoners. G4S security guards currently help to transfer inmates between prisons and the courts, as territory correctional staff face record prisoner numbers. Despite a recruitment drive for 202 new corrections officers to be employed inside prisons this financial year, NT Corrections Minister Gerard Maley has previously acknowledged the prison population is growing and that the government needs to expand the workforce. In an internal memo seen by the ABC, corrections staff were told Corrections Commissioner Matthew Varley had signed a work order to expand the duties carried out by private security guards. "As we shape this next phase, we are working closely with G4S to determine what a Northern Territory-based G4S staffing model could look like." The United Workers Union (UWU), which represents corrections officers, has been strongly opposed to the NT's six-month arrangement with G4S since it began in March. UWU NT branch secretary Erina Early said although G4S guards had been assisting with prison transfers since that time, corrections staff had not seen any improvement to their working conditions. "It hasn't made much change to our correctional officers at all because the [prisoner] numbers are increasing," she said. "Bringing in G4S may relieve a couple of shifts, but it's not having the outcome that the government [is] hoping for." Ms Early said union members were worried for "the safety of the prisoners and also safety of the police" — who have a different skillset to correctional officers — and held concerns the expansion of G4S's services signalled growing privatisation in the NT's corrections system. "They've been saying this since it was announced by Commissioner Matthew Varley, that G4S were coming in — as soon as you have them in, it's like a cancer, they will spread," she said. "They have been taking more and more roles." Corrections Minister Gerard Maley last month told the ABC that privatising the entire NT prison system was not on the government's radar. "There are private firms that run prisons in their entirety, that's not our plan at all," he said. "Our plan is to make sure that we have highly trained officers behind the wire, and then independent contractors such as G4S doing the services outside that." The NT's corrections department has been housing a growing number of prisoners in police watch houses in recent months, due to capacity constraints at territory prisons. Earlier this week, there were about 100 people being held inside the Palmerston police watch house, including overflow corrections prisoners. G4S is part of American private security giant Allied Universal, which employs more than 800,000 people internationally and generates about $20 billion in annual revenue. The company describes itself as a "global leader in security". Security guards employed by G4S in Australia mainly work in prisons and detention centres. The firm has operated Victoria's largest maximum security prison, Port Phillip Prison, since it opened in 1997. A 2018 report by the Victorian auditor-general's office found "serious incidents" at Port Phillip Prison, including assaults and drug use, and "exposed weaknesses in how G4S … manage safety and security risks". A Victorian coroner recently recommended G4S improve staff training following the "preventable" 2022 death of an Aboriginal man in his prison cell. Port Phillip Prison is due to close by the end of this year. Last year, G4S reached a confidential settlement with the parents of an Iranian asylum seeker, who was fatally bashed by guards at a Manus Island offshore detention centre in 2014. The company was also fined over its role in the death of an Aboriginal elder, who overheated in the back of a prison van in remote Western Australia in 2008. It is not yet clear how much the NT government's contract with G4S has cost the public.