(Bangkok Road Power Power) issued a report that hundreds of thousands of people were traded to Southeast Asian countries by hundreds of thousands of criminal gangs and were coerced to perform online fraud.
The report issued by the United Nations on Tuesday (August 29) quoted "reliable news" that at least 120,000 people were forced to work in Myanmar for fraud groups; it estimated that there were about 100,000 people in Cambodia.At the same time, criminal groups also operate online casinos and virtual currency fraud in Laos, the Philippines and Thailand.
The person in charge of the UN Human Rights Affairs Turk said: "Those who are coerced to participate in these fraud activities have to endure inhuman treatment while being forced to sin. They are victims, not criminals."
According to the report, the victims of online fraud from being traded from Southeast Asia, mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, South Asia, and even far to Africa and Latin America.Most of the deceived victims are men, but there are also some women and teenagers.
However, when a Cambodian police spokesman answered inquiries, he questioned the number of traffic traffic in the United Nations.The spokesman said, "I don't know how to respond. Where did they get this number? Do they have investigations? Foreigners just talk nonsense."
The Myanmar Military Government did not respond to media inquiries.