Zürcher Nachrichten - Border casinos caught in Thailand-Cambodia crossfire

EUR -
AED 4.359583
AFN 76.571731
ALL 96.361894
AMD 448.208897
ANG 2.125366
AOA 1088.559718
ARS 1658.430745
AUD 1.674508
AWG 2.139726
AZN 2.021896
BAM 1.95406
BBD 2.391471
BDT 145.2207
BGN 1.956308
BHD 0.44742
BIF 3507.845208
BMD 1.187088
BND 1.497067
BOB 8.204971
BRL 6.188057
BSD 1.187343
BTN 107.617714
BWP 15.568663
BYN 3.403969
BYR 23266.925916
BZD 2.388174
CAD 1.615805
CDF 2659.077279
CHF 0.913381
CLF 0.025768
CLP 1017.464817
CNY 8.191679
CNH 8.188284
COP 4356.316397
CRC 578.78467
CUC 1.187088
CUP 31.457834
CVE 110.814954
CZK 24.25067
DJF 210.969063
DKK 7.47088
DOP 73.896513
DZD 153.854932
EGP 55.612587
ERN 17.806321
ETB 184.35207
FJD 2.60103
FKP 0.869567
GBP 0.871637
GEL 3.193486
GGP 0.869567
GHS 13.063932
GIP 0.869567
GMD 87.252032
GNF 10416.698173
GTQ 9.106892
GYD 248.42718
HKD 9.278939
HNL 31.465062
HRK 7.536225
HTG 155.481564
HUF 379.159529
IDR 19961.59793
ILS 3.637149
IMP 0.869567
INR 107.508096
IQD 1555.678899
IRR 50006.084585
ISK 145.21598
JEP 0.869567
JMD 185.484851
JOD 0.841611
JPY 181.527721
KES 153.135034
KGS 103.811233
KHR 4774.467888
KMF 493.828393
KPW 1068.365971
KRW 1710.012554
KWD 0.364082
KYD 0.989552
KZT 587.521637
LAK 25463.038895
LBP 101555.383044
LKR 367.352206
LRD 221.270111
LSL 18.921788
LTL 3.505163
LVL 0.718058
LYD 7.484609
MAD 10.858313
MDL 20.120763
MGA 5229.12296
MKD 61.623998
MMK 2493.246693
MNT 4249.200954
MOP 9.561929
MRU 47.36466
MUR 54.451567
MVR 18.340507
MWK 2061.381704
MXN 20.437104
MYR 4.632612
MZN 75.829627
NAD 18.945479
NGN 1606.16603
NIO 43.569121
NOK 11.325009
NPR 172.186493
NZD 1.96764
OMR 0.456437
PAB 1.187483
PEN 3.982086
PGK 5.095872
PHP 68.868942
PKR 331.849929
PLN 4.214999
PYG 7818.039082
QAR 4.322485
RON 5.092132
RSD 117.411316
RUB 91.67524
RWF 1728.400211
SAR 4.45153
SBD 9.542607
SCR 16.400526
SDG 714.036197
SEK 10.59799
SGD 1.498467
SHP 0.890623
SLE 29.023862
SLL 24892.642102
SOS 678.420691
SRD 44.846962
STD 24570.326057
STN 24.81014
SVC 10.389749
SYP 13128.689272
SZL 18.922119
THB 36.906404
TJS 11.179523
TMT 4.166679
TND 3.371068
TOP 2.858223
TRY 51.915756
TTD 8.043838
TWD 37.312437
TZS 3086.429083
UAH 51.072427
UGX 4203.257562
USD 1.187088
UYU 45.529462
UZS 14595.247907
VES 462.734676
VND 30816.805958
VUV 141.690362
WST 3.218816
XAF 655.395542
XAG 0.015589
XAU 0.00024
XCD 3.208165
XCG 2.139995
XDR 0.815054
XOF 655.892924
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.912732
ZAR 18.944655
ZMK 10685.212913
ZMW 22.02713
ZWL 382.24187
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    13.16

    +0.23%

  • BCC

    -1.3500

    88.06

    -1.53%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    16.87

    -0.36%

  • BCE

    0.1800

    25.83

    +0.7%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    23.7

    0%

  • GSK

    0.0500

    58.54

    +0.09%

  • NGG

    0.5800

    91.22

    +0.64%

  • CMSD

    -0.1280

    23.942

    -0.53%

  • RIO

    -1.6100

    97.91

    -1.64%

  • RELX

    1.0800

    28.81

    +3.75%

  • BTI

    0.2800

    60.61

    +0.46%

  • VOD

    -0.0600

    15.62

    -0.38%

  • BP

    -1.3600

    37.19

    -3.66%

  • AZN

    -0.2400

    204.52

    -0.12%

Border casinos caught in Thailand-Cambodia crossfire
Border casinos caught in Thailand-Cambodia crossfire / Photo: Handout - Agence Kampuchea Press (AKP)/AFP

Border casinos caught in Thailand-Cambodia crossfire

Thailand has struck multiple casinos linked to cyberscamming in neighbouring Cambodia during an almost two-week-long border conflict, with the prime minister saying he would "take care" of fronts for fraud operations.

Text size:

Across Southeast Asia, criminal gangs have used casinos, hotels and fortified compounds to carry out sophisticated cyberscams, according to the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, often relying on trafficked people.

Cambodia hosts dozens of the scam centres with an estimated 100,000 people -- many victims of human trafficking -- perpetrating online scams in a multibillion-dollar industry.

At least four casinos on Cambodia's border with Thailand -- two which monitors have identified as scam hubs -- have been struck this month in a military conflict between the neighbours that has killed dozens and displaced more than half a million.

UN human rights chief Volker Turk said Thursday that trafficked foreign nationals forced to carry out scams in Cambodia were "now exposed to further risk by the fighting", and called for their evacuation.

But efforts to make peace with Cambodia rested on Phnom Penh's commitment to "destroy scamming attempts", Thailand's Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul told reporters at an international anti-scam conference in Bangkok on Wednesday.

If casinos in Cambodia were hiding fraud operations behind their doors, "then we will regard it as a scamming centre that we need to take care of", he said.

Rights abuses in Cambodia's scam centres are happening on a "mass scale", and the government's poor response suggested its complicity, said a June report by Amnesty International.

But Ros Phirun, secretary general of Cambodia's Commercial Gambling Management Commission, told AFP that authorities were taking "serious action" to crack down on scams, and called Thailand's action on the border casinos "totally illegal".

- Casinos targeted -

Thailand last week said it attacked three casinos across the border which the Thai army claimed were being used as Cambodian weapons storage facilities and firing positions.

"Every scam centre and casino we attacked, we had clear intelligence that it was used as a military base," deputy Thai army spokesman Richa Suksuwanon told reporters on Thursday.

But some casinos caught in the crossfire reportedly housed civilians.

A UN statement on Thursday cited a survivor of a strike in Oddar Meanchay province who told the Human Rights Office that one civilian was killed and two others wounded.

The O'Smach resort and casino -- identified by Amnesty International as a scam compound -- was built by Cambodian conglomerate L.Y.P Group headed by Cambodian senator Ly Yong Phat.

He was sanctioned by Washington last year over his firm's alleged role in "serious human rights abuses related to the treatment of trafficked workers subjected to forced labor in online scam centers".

Last month, Thailand issued an arrest warrant for the tycoon for his alleged involvement in transnational crimes, and seized $300 million in assets from other Cambodian businessmen.

O'Smach and other casino sites Thailand targeted had potentially thousands of victims of human trafficking inside, according to Jacob Sims, a visiting fellow at Harvard University's Asia Center.

"Bombing scam compounds is not a reasonable approach to combatting the scam industry," he told AFP, adding that Thailand's asset seizures were more effective.

But, "the existence of the scam compounds -- and the world's mounting frustration at Cambodia for hosting a globally predatory industry -- offers Thailand a useful pretext for extraterritorial aggression that would otherwise likely be condemned".

burs-sjc/sco/tym/fox

A.Ferraro--NZN