HANOI, June 12 (Reuters) – Vietnamese police have busted a group suspected of trying to establish a large-scale online scam centre in the country, authorities said on Friday, as criminal networks spread their operations across Southeast Asia.
Police in Phu Tho province uncovered and disrupted a transnational group linked to online fraud syndicates operating in Cambodia, preventing it from setting up what they described as a major scam hub in Vietnam, the Ministry of Public Security said in a statement.
Four people were arrested, including a Chinese national and three Vietnamese, according to the statement.
Investigators said the group had rented multiple resorts, farmstays and villas in Hanoi, Lao Cai and Phu Tho to house dozens of people as part of their preparations, adding that many of them had previously worked at scam centres in Cambodia.
Police also seized dozens of computers, hundreds of mobile phones and internet devices allegedly used for online fraud, saying the site was close to becoming operational.
The raid “prevented the formation of a large-scale transnational high-tech fraud centre within Vietnam,” and also helped safeguard national security and protect people’s assets, the ministry said.
Speaking at a virtual press briefing on Wednesday, FBI Co-Deputy Director Andrew Bailey described scam compounds as among “the most significant threats facing the world today”, warning that their impact across Southeast Asia was “growing at an exponential rate”.
Bailey said the operations are run by sophisticated transnational networks that move people, money and technology across borders, exploiting weak governance and emerging tools to expand globally.
Amnesty International said in a report on Monday that dozens of suspected global scam compounds in Cambodia are still in operation despite a months-long crackdown by authorities.
(Reporting by Khanh Vu; Editing by David Stanway)
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