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New book tells ‘true stories' of Hongkongers trafficked to Myanmar scam farms
New book tells ‘true stories' of Hongkongers trafficked to Myanmar scam farms

HKFP

time12-07-2025

  • HKFP

New book tells ‘true stories' of Hongkongers trafficked to Myanmar scam farms

Wearing dark blue medical masks, Wendy and her younger sister stepped in front of the audience at a book launch. The two, hesitant to reveal their faces, used pseudonyms, still wary that they could endanger people still held captive in Myanmar scam farms. Wendy's sister – identified only with the pseudonym 'Luncheon Meat' – was trafficked across the Thai border into Myanmar last summer after she took up a purchasing agent job in Thailand. Upon arriving in Chiang Mai, a city in northern Thailand, the recruiters seized her identity documents and drove her across the border into Myanmar. Soon after, while staying in a complex at the border town, she was forced to conduct investment scams targeting wealthy American men. Cases of Hongkongers trafficked to Myanmar were widely reported last year, following a surge in 2022. 'Luncheon Meat' is featured in a new book, No Way Out: Modern Slavery Behind the Scam Curtain, written by former opposition district councillor Andy Yu and social worker Frank Fung. It details the harrowing accounts of Hongkongers trafficked to Myanmar's notorious 'scam factories' and the great lengths their families went to bring them home. Yu interviewed the two sisters, along with other victims and their loved ones, early this year The former district councillor was approached by the Hong Kong Economic Journal, a local newspaper, to write a book after he supported several victims' families through the ordeal. Too little, too late One chapter of the book is told from Wendy's perspective, detailing the seven months of bringing her sister home – from taking the bogus job and enduring the torturous conditions in the Myanmar scam farms to the family's rescue efforts that eventually led to her release in March. 'There were lots of things that I was afraid I did too late… or that I didn't do enough,' Wendy said at the book launch event last week. 'It felt like we had to be alert for 24 hours a day,' she said, recounting how she and the rest of her family would stay up late, fearing they might miss her sister's messages. Keeping up with her sister's whereabouts also proved to be an ordeal, as she was moved multiple times between interconnected compounds that rapidly sprang up over the past few years amid the civil war in Myanmar. Since a military coup ousted the democratically elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi in February 2021, triggering armed conflicts with ethnic militias, human trafficking has surged, along with other forms of transnational crime. In lockstep, scam compounds have cropped up along Myanmar's southern border. After Luncheon Meat was found texting her family over WhatsApp, her captors demanded a US$500,000 (HK$4 million) ransom for her release, but her family could not afford it. There was no way they could scrape together such a hefty sum, never mind that there was no guarantee her captors would honour their promise. 'We all knew that paying the ransom would not save them, and would even allow the captors to take advantage of the situation,' Wendy says in the book. She also recounts seeking assistance from vigilante-style groups on Chinese social media, which she suspects had ties to the Myanmar syndicates. Some claimed they could help rescue people in the compounds under a 'two in, one out' agreement — an 'absurd' condition that would require Wendy to 'bring' two people into the scam farms for her sister's rescue. 'There were also times I was afraid that I had done too much,' Wendy said at last week's event. She added that she faced a 'dilemma' as to whether she should reveal more or exercise caution when speaking to the press, including HKFP earlier this year. 'When we decided to approach the media, we were worried about saying or revealing too much about the victims. Would the crime syndicates recognise them [from news reports]? Would that put them in even more danger?' she said. Wendy's sister was among the trafficking victims who were eventually brought home after mainland Chinese actor Wang Xing, reported missing along the Thai-Myanmar border in January, was rescued following a joint operation between Thai and Chinese authorities. For the families of the trafficking victims, the celebrity's rescue showed that Chinese authorities had leverage over the military-affiliated ethnic armed groups in control of the scam farms in Myanmar. Just days after Wang's rescue, Hong Kong sent a task force to take part in joint rescue operations with the Thai authorities and the Chinese embassy. The trafficking victims were released gradually over the span of about three months. As of mid-March, three Hong Kong residents were still waiting to be rescued from scam farms in Myanmar, according to the city's government. Cautionary tale Yu, who is scheduled to give a talk on the book later this month at the Hong Kong Book Fair, said he hoped the victims' stories would serve as a cautionary tale, particularly for young people facing economic precarity. The book is the first of its kind, laying out Hongkongers' accounts of the Myanmar cybercrime compounds, he added. Yu said that the victims and families were advised against revealing too much to the public – an approach he disagreed with. 'Shouldn't the public know what's going on in those compounds? The government is always talking about educating people against scammers, but a better and more realistic approach would be to tell the true stories of the victims,' he said. Yu also said that he had notified Undersecretary for Security Michael Cheuk about the book's publication. Earlier, without naming the ex-councillor, security chief Chris Tang had said that commenting publicly on the trafficking cases without a full understanding of official operations 'may not be a good thing' for those who were still waiting to be saved. Yu's co-author, Fung, said that the book might help young Hongkongers who are unaware of the methods used in job scams stay vigilant, adding that crime syndicates in Southeast Asia could strike again. If the government believes the book could be useful for young people with limited experience in the workforce, it could be placed in school libraries, he said, while also calling on the authorities to step up anti-fraud education. After the event, Yu also pointed to the lack of human trafficking laws in Hong Kong. Instead, those prosecuted over human trafficking cases are usually charged with fraud, a lighter offence in most jurisdictions. Asked whether he was worried that he might face criticism or allegations that he was trying to pave the way for the Legislative Council elections at the end of the year, Yu said that he had no intention of running for office. In the preface, the two authors defended the victims and their families against victim-blaming attitudes, saying the book could not have been written without the victims and their families having the courage to speak up. 'There's a common refrain that the victims were stupid, that they only have themselves to blame for wanting to make a quick buck. It has to be said that blaming or ridiculing victims who have gone through great suffering will only cause secondary victimisation and stop them from standing up and talking about their experiences,' the authors wrote. 'In fact, almost all of the interviewees admitted that they were foolish. But even if that were the case, that doesn't mean they should be imprisoned, physically and mentally tortured, forced to work, or face death threats.'

Hong Kong delivery workers' rights group ceases operations
Hong Kong delivery workers' rights group ceases operations

HKFP

time01-07-2025

  • Politics
  • HKFP

Hong Kong delivery workers' rights group ceases operations

A labour rights group for delivery workers has ceased operations after local media reported that Hong Kong lawmakers had been cautioned against discussing platform workers' rights. Without providing a reason, the Riders' Rights Concern Group announced on Monday evening that it would cease operations effective immediately. The posts appeared on Facebook and Instagram before their social media pages became inaccessible. The labour group is part of the Hong Kong Christian Industrial Committee, a non-government pressure group. The announcement came just days after an opinion piece in the Hong Kong Economic Journal suggesting that lawmakers had been warned not to discuss four issues, including delivery workers' rights. It is unclear whether the warnings came from the local authorities. HKFP has reached out to the government for comment. The concern group has campaigned for delivery workers' rights and lobbied for strengthened legal protections since 2021. The concern group supported foodpanda strikes over wage cuts in 2022 and assisted workers for the delivery company Zeek after it shut down in 2023. It also warned of further exploitation in the industry after UK food delivery company Deliveroo announced its exit from the Hong Kong market in March. Some lawmakers in the city's opposition-free legislature, including Lam Chun-sing, chair of the Federation of Hong Kong and Kowloon Labour Unions, have called for the creation of a third legal category recognising the hybrid status of delivery workers. Following strikes by delivery workers earlier this year, labour and welfare chief Chris Sun last month told lawmakers that the Hong Kong government will introduce a proposal this year to enhance the rights and benefits of digital platform workers. Couriers for Keeta have been staging a series of protests across Hong Kong since late April demanding better treatment from the delivery platform.

EV maker Xpeng to test autonomous driving software in Hong Kong to support go-global drive
EV maker Xpeng to test autonomous driving software in Hong Kong to support go-global drive

South China Morning Post

time04-03-2025

  • Automotive
  • South China Morning Post

EV maker Xpeng to test autonomous driving software in Hong Kong to support go-global drive

Chinese electric vehicle (EV) maker Xpeng said it would use Hong Kong to test its artificial intelligence (AI)-powered self-driving technology, as part of its effort to expand globally and explore right-hand drive markets. Advertisement He Xiaopeng, co-founder and CEO of the Guangzhou-based company, said on Tuesday that tests of its autonomous driving system, known as Xpeng Navigation Guided Pilot (X NGP), would be conducted in Hong Kong soon, according to the Hong Kong Economic Journal. He spoke ahead of the opening of the National People's Congress, which begins Wednesday and is expected to run through next Tuesday. He is an NPC delegate. The AI-powered technology, which competes with Tesla's Full Self-Driving (FSD) driver-assistance software, will be introduced in right-hand drive markets like Thailand, he added. He did not provide a specific time frame for the company's Hong Kong testing. In a statement to the Post, Xpeng confirmed the CEO's remarks. It added that the advanced driver assistance system, which enables cars to navigate on streets and conduct self-parking, would be promoted worldwide in 2026. 'We hope that with better development and testing in the future, we can bring Xpeng's top smart driving capabilities to the world, including Thailand, other Southeast Asian markets and more countries in 2026,' it said. Advertisement Xpeng primarily builds left-hand drive models for its customers on the mainland, but it started to assemble right-hand drive models last year to compete in markets like Hong Kong and Southeast Asia.

Hong Kong tycoon Richard Li to sell HKEJ publisher to PCCW for US$9 million
Hong Kong tycoon Richard Li to sell HKEJ publisher to PCCW for US$9 million

South China Morning Post

time28-01-2025

  • Business
  • South China Morning Post

Hong Kong tycoon Richard Li to sell HKEJ publisher to PCCW for US$9 million

Published: 7:07pm, 28 Jan 2025 Hong Kong tycoon Richard Li Tzar-kai is reshuffling his assets again, this time by selling his personal interest in the publisher of Hong Kong Economic Journal to telecommunications group PCCW for HK$70 million (US$9 million). PCCW, in which Li controls a 31.8 per cent stake, will buy the HKEJ publisher Clermont Media from an offshore trust company in which he is the settlor, according to a stock exchange filing on Tuesday. Li expects to capitalise an undisclosed amount of his loans to the publisher in the transaction, ending his direct interest since he took control of the publisher in 2006. The original cost of the acquisition was stated as US$38.5 million , according to the PCCW filing. The South China Morning Post, owned by Alibaba Group Holding, competes directly with the Hong Kong Economic Journal. The sale will end almost two decades of Richard Li's direct interest in the publisher of the Hong Kong Economic Journal. Photo: Edmond So The price tag was based on a multiple of 0.69 times revenue, using the average ratio of 0.64 times from three unnamed Hong Kong-listed industry peers, the filing showed.

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