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Philippines arrests 400 foreigners in scam centre raid

Philippines arrests 400 foreigners in scam centre raid
This photo taken on Jul 18, 2024, shows a detained former scam centre worker walking along the detention rooms of a scam centre in Manila that has been shut down by police. (File photo: AFP/Jam Sta Rosa)

MANILA: Around 400 foreign nationals were arrested on Wednesday (Jan 8) in a "large-scale" raid on a suspected online scam farm in Manila, the national immigration agency said.

Authorities raided a building and found workers allegedly engaged in online scam operations targeting victims abroad.

International concern has grown in recent years over similar scam operations in Asia which are often staffed by trafficking victims who were tricked or coerced into promoting bogus cryptocurrency investments and other cons.

"Their operations were found to be in violation of immigration laws and posed significant risks to the public," Fortunato Manahan, the Bureau of Immigration intelligence division chief, said in a statement describing the latest raid.

President Ferdinand Marcos in July last year announced a ban by the end of 2024 on Philippine online gaming operators (POGO) that Manila says have been used as cover by organised crime groups for human trafficking, money laundering, online fraud, kidnappings and even murder.

The Bureau of Immigration had been monitoring the "POGO-like activities" of the raided company "for some time", the statement said.

The foreign nationals, many of whom were Chinese, were undergoing booking procedures, immigration bureau spokeswoman Dana Sandoval told AFP.

They will be temporarily detained while awaiting deportation, the bureau said.

The Washington-based think-tank United States Institute of Peace said in a May 2024 report that online scammers target millions of victims around the world and rake in annual revenues of US$64 billion.

It estimates the industry employs half a million workers, including 15,000 in the Philippines, who were recruited mainly via social media and were then forced to carry out scams, facing torture if they failed to meet quotas.

Source: AFP/lh

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