Hong Kong sets up task force on Southeast Asian job scams

A police officer walks past the belongings of a foreign domestic helper on her Sunday rest day during an operation against people who fail to comply with social distancing measures in Hong Kong’s Mong Kok area on February 20, 2022, amid the city’s worst-ever coronavirus outbreak. (Photo by Bertha WANG / AFP)

Hong Kong, China | AFP |

Hong Kong law enforcement on Thursday announced a task force to track down and help trafficked residents ensnared by so-called “boiler room” scams in Southeast Asia that have become a growing scourge.

In recent months, victims have reported being lured to countries such as Myanmar, Cambodia, Thailand and Laos on false promises of romance or high-paying jobs, and then held against their will and forced to work, sometimes for months.

These operations have received ongoing news coverage around Asia, but it caused fresh outrage in Hong Kong and Taiwan recently after the press published graphic photos and videos of victims being threatened and abused.

Hong Kong has received requests for help from 20 people, with eight of them unaccounted for in Myanmar and the other 12 confirmed safe, Under Secretary for Security Michael Cheuk said on Thursday.

“Our top priority at the moment is trying to secure their safe return,” Cheuk said, adding that the city will work with Chinese embassies and local law enforcement.

Cheuk urged the public to exercise caution when travelling to Southeast Asia, and to avoid the northern and southern parts of Myanmar.

“Boiler room scam operations really took off in border areas and special economic zones in Cambodia, Myanmar and Laos during the pandemic,” Jeremy Douglas, Regional Representative of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) for Southeast Asia, told AFP.

“And in quite a few they’re using trafficked labour to work the scams. It’s nightmare for law enforcement and human rights.”

Human rights lawyer Patricia Ho said Hong Kong’s existing laws were not enough to tackle such scams, as the city had no legislation that specifically outlawed human trafficking and forced labour.

“Legislation which empower the police to freeze assets in human trafficking cases will be vital to help them solve these crimes” if the criminals had ties to Hong Kong, Ho said.

On Thursday, Macau police said five residents were found involved in scam operations that promised casino jobs in Laos and Cambodia.

One man had safely left Laos while three women were successfully persuaded to cancel their trips to Southeast Asia this morning, Macau police said.

Earlier this week, Taiwan brought nine people back from Bangkok after Thai authorities suspected them of being trafficking victims.

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