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Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
World

Over 5,000 ‘still trapped in Myanmar scam centres’

Officials with the US Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Thai Department of Special Investigation (DSI) surveil scam centre buildings located in Myawaddy, across the Moei River from Mae Sot district in Tak province, on March 3, 2026. (Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation via Wikimedia Commons)

More than 5,300 people are still trapped in online scam centres near the Thai border in Myanmar, a human rights group says, over one year after thousands were freed during a multinational crackdown in ​the region.

In a June 22 letter to Thai police urging them to take action, the Civil Society Network for Human Trafficking Victim Assistance (CSNHTV) said many of those trapped were foreign nationals ‌held at four locations inside areas controlled by a Myanmar militia.

The group estimates that the people trapped include around 1,600 Chinese nationals, 200 Burmese, 20 Thais as well as citizens ⁠from the Philippines, Taiwan, Malaysia, Brazil, Russia, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda and Zimbabwe.

Scam centres in Southeast Asia, including those in Myanmar and Cambodia, run illegal online schemes that defraud people worldwide and generate billions of dollars of annual revenues, according to the United Nations.

Many of these facilities, ​such as those along parts of the Myanmar-Thailand border, are operated by foreign nationals trafficked there by criminal gangs, often working in oppressive environments ​and ‌subjected to abuse.

Thailand last year fronted a regional effort to dismantle the scam centres along its borders, pulling out an estimated 5,000 people from ​sprawling ⁠scam hubs in Myanmar’s Myawaddy area, but large-scale illegal operations have continued in Myawaddy and other locations just across the border from Tak province.

In its letter, the Thailand-based CSNHTV said a large ⁠number of victims were currently confined in compounds located within areas controlled by Myanmar’s Democratic Karen Buddhist Army (DKBA) militia.

“Many of these compounds have yet to be dismantled or subjected to rescue operations to free ⁠all remaining victims,” it said.

“As a result, these syndicates continue to ​engage in online fraud and human trafficking, causing harm to victims around the world, particularly in the United States and Europe.”

Two DKBA officials did not respond to calls seeking comment.

A spokeswoman for Myanmar’s ‌military-backed government, which has ⁠publicly announced a crackdown on scam ​operations, also did not immediately respond to questions from Reuters.

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