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Nearly 300 Indian nationals brought back home following release from scam centres in Myanmar

Byindianadmin

Mar 11, 2025
Nearly 300 Indian nationals brought back home following release from scam centres in Myanmar

Around 7,000 workers from at least two dozen countries have been freed, the majority of them Chinese, but many have been languishing in squalid conditions in temporary holding camps on the Myanmar-Thai border

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Victims of scam centers who were tricked or trafficked into working in Myanmar, stuck in limbo at a compound inside the KK Park, a fraud factory, and a human trafficking hub on the border with Thailand-Myanmar after a multinational crackdown on the compounds run by criminal gangs, operated by the Karen Border Guard Force (BGF) in Myawaddy, Myanmar. File image/ Reuters

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Nearly 300 Indians flew home through Thailand on Monday after being released from scam centres in Myanmar, officials in the kingdom said, as part of efforts to shut down the illegal online fraud operations.

Authorities in Myanmar, under pressure from ally China, have cracked down in recent weeks on the scam compounds that have flourished in the country’s lawless borderlands.

Around 7,000 workers from at least two dozen countries have been freed, the majority of them Chinese, but many have been languishing in squalid conditions in temporary holding camps on the Myanmar-Thai border.

A group of Indian officials crossed into Myanmar to accompany seven buses taking the freed Indian nationals – as well as three more carrying their luggage – to Mae Sot airport in northwest Thailand.

The Indian government sent a C-17 transport plane to carry the 266 men and 17 women back home, with a second batch of 257 due to be flown out on Tuesday.

China has repatriated more than 2,000 of its nationals freed from Myanmar scam centres through Thailand since the three countries began their crackdown late last month.

Scam centres have sprung up in Myanmar’s border areas in recent years as part of a criminal industry worth billions of dollars a year.

Thousands of foreign workers staff the centres, trawling social media for victims to fleece, often through romance or investment cons.

Many workers say they were lured or tricked into taking the work and suffered beatings and abuse.

But China has so far treated its repatriated workers as criminal suspects, clapping them in handcuffs on their return home.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Firstpost staff.)

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