Over 200 foreigners rescued from scam centres still stranded along Thai-Myanmar border
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Rebel group Karen National Army claims to have repatriated more than 8,000 foreign nationals after rescuing them from scam centres in Myanmar’s Myawaddy area in recent months.
PHOTO: REUTERS
YANGON – More than 200 foreign nationals rescued from scam centres in eastern Myanmar remain stranded along the war-torn country’s border with Thailand, according to a local rebel group overseeing their repatriation.
For years, criminal networks have trafficked hundreds of thousands of people to scam compounds across South-east Asia, including many along the Thai-Myanmar border, where victims are forced to work in illegal online schemes, according to the UN.
Karen National Army (KNA), a rebel group that claims to have repatriated more than 8,000 foreign nationals after rescuing them from scam centres in Myanmar’s Myawaddy area in recent months, said it was currently housing 216 people, including citizens of Vietnam, China, the Philippines and Indonesia.
“We are giving food and medical supplies to these people,” KNA spokesman Naing Maung Zaw told Reuters on June 24. “Some are even pregnant, and we are providing healthcare for them.”
Since February, Thailand has halted electricity, internet and fuel supplies
Two residents of Myawaddy, which lies across from the Thai town of Mae Sot, said that there has not been any electricity supplied from Thailand for months.
Power supplied by the Myanmar government has not been stable, leaving much of the settlement – and the scam centres surrounding it – reliant on generators, they said.
Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra said on June 23 that her administration was planning to curtail electricity supplies to illegal operations in Cambodia, following a sharp decline in relations between the neighbours.
“After we cut electricity and water to Myanmar, the number of complaints dropped significantly,” she told reporters. “We’ve since learnt that the criminal activity has moved from Myanmar to Cambodia.”
The Cambodian government denies the allegations.
International pressure to shut down the scam centres intensified following the abduction of Chinese actor Wang Xing
He was later rescued by Thai police, who located him across the border in Myanmar.
Criminal networks, mainly emanating from China, are known to run several of these scam centres, including those in the Myawaddy region, according to the US Institute of Peace. REUTERS


