
More trafficking victims forced into online scam hubs – DW – 06/30/2025
Human trafficking-fueled scam centers have significantly expanded their operations worldwide, according to a crime trend update released on Monday by the international police agency Interpol.
Hubs where trafficking victims are forced to take part in online fraud first emerged in a few Southeast Asian nations, but investigators are now also uncovering similar fraud centers in other regions.
According to the international police organization, victims now come from 66 countries across all continents, highlighting what Interpol describes as a "global crisis" involving hundreds of thousands of people.
Scam centers are now increasingly found in other regions, including the Middle East, West Africa — fast emerging as a new regional hub — and Central America.
Victims are often lured with fake job offers and then held captive in scam compounds. Many are blackmailed over alleged debts, beaten, sexually exploited, and in some cases tortured or raped.
Inside these centers, they are forced to run online scams, mostly targeting people abroad to steal money.
To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
A 2024 Interpol-led operation exposed dozens of cases where victims were coerced into committing fraud, including a raid on an industrial-scale scam centre in the Philippines. That same year, police dismantled a centre in Namibia where 88 youths were forced to scam others.
Emerging technologies are fuelling this trend further. The crime update notes a surge in the use of artificial intelligence, from generating fake job ads to creating deepfake profiles for "sextortion" and romance scams.
Interpol says the pool of those preyed upon has widened significantly.
While early human trafficking victims were mainly Chinese-speaking and came from China, Malaysia, Thailand or Singapore, people are now being trafficked to such hubs from South America, East Africa and Western Europe.
"Tackling this rapidly globalizing threat requires a coordinated international response," said said Interpol's acting head of police services Cyril Gout.
The report found that about 90% of human trafficking facilitators came from Asia, while 11% were from South America or Africa.
About 80% of these facilitators were men, with 61% aged between 20 and 39.
Online scam centers were initially concentrated in Cambodia, with additional trafficking hubs later uncovered in Laos and Myanmar. Today, similar operations have been identified in at least four more Asian countries, and evidence shows the model is spreading to other regions such as West Africa, where cyber-enabled financial crime is already common.
In its findings, Interpol warned that the spread of such criminal networks needs urgent, coordinated action to disrupt trafficking routes and support victims.
Interpol said that these criminal hubs are increasingly intertwined with other major transnational crimes, demanding a globally coordinated response.
Trafficking routes used for scam centers are being exploited for smuggling drugs, firearms, and endangered wildlife like tigers and pangolins, Interpol said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


DW
15 minutes ago
- DW
Colombia: Court orders release of former President Uribe – DW – 08/20/2025
Earlier this month, Alvaro Uribe was found guilty of bribing militia fighters to withdraw testimony linking him to right-wing paramilitary groups. Colombia's Superior Court on Tuesday ordered the release of former President Alvaro Uribe from house arrest while he appeals a conviction for witness tampering and bribery in a case related to the country's prolonged civil war. On August 1, the 73-year-old was sentenced to 12 years of detention. This was the first time in Colombia's history that a former president was convicted of a crime. He also received the longest possible prison term. Uribe was president from 2002 to 2010 and oversaw the fight against leftist rebels. His hardline approach is attributed to FARC rebels being forced into peace negotiations. However, detractors point to the human rights violations under him as Colombia's military strived for crucial victories against the rebels. The military is accused of killing thousands of young people and passing them off as rebels. Uribe was found guilty of pressuring jailed witnesses to alter testimony linking him to right-wing militias. He denies the charges and appealed the conviction, calling the case politically motivated and instigated by Colombia's left, now led by President Gustavo Petro, his political archrival. The court said Uribe does not pose a flight risk and will remain free until mid-October, when a final decision is to be issued. If the deadline passes without a ruling, the conviction will be annulled and the former president will go free. "Thanks to God, thanks to so many fellow Colombians for their expressions of solidarity," Uribe posted on X. "I will dedicate every minute of my freedom to the freedom of Colombia." Uribe remains a powerful figure in Colombia's conservative politics. He was a close ally of the United States and retains ties to the American right. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio had called Uribe's conviction "the weaponization of Colombia's judicial branch by radical judges." However, Rubio did not provide any evidence backing his claims. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video


DW
9 hours ago
- DW
Nigeria: Gunmen kill worshippers in Katsina mosque attack – DW – 08/19/2025
Armed men have stormed a mosque in Nigeria's Katsina state during morning prayers, killing at least a dozen people. Officials say the assault may have been a reprisal following earlier clashes. Gunmen attacked a mosque in the Nigerian town of Unguwan Mantau in Katsina state on Tuesday morning, killing at least 13 people during prayers, local authorities said. The attack came days after both town residents and the Nigerian military were reported to have targeted armed group members. The Reuters news agency reported that at least 27 worshippers had been killed in the mosque attack. State commissioner Nasir Mu'azu said the gunmen struck while residents gathered for morning prayers. He said soldiers and police had since been deployed to prevent further attacks. Mu'azu said the mosque attack was likely in retaliation after Unguwan Mantau townspeople ambushed and killed several of the gunmen in the area over the weekend. He added that gunmen often hide among the crops in farms during the rainy season to carry out assaults on communities. A report prepared for the UN and seen by the AFP news agency described the assailants as "armed bandits." It suggested the attack may have been retaliatory after Nigerian army troops repelled an attempted bandit attack nearby. Nigerian authorities have at times turned to peace deals with armed groups when security forces could not defeat them militarily, including in Katsina state. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video But officials in Malumfashi, the local government area where the mosque killings took place, had not entered into any truce agreement. Witnesses reported that panic spread quickly through the farming community after the attack. For years, gangs known locally as bandits have targeted rural areas in northwestern and central Nigeria. They raid villages, kidnap residents for ransom and burn homes after looting them. The violence began as disputes over land and water between farmers and herders but has morphed into organized crime. Cattle rustling, kidnappings and so-called taxes on farming communities now provide steady revenue to armed groups. The insecurity is worsened by the limited presence of state institutions in mineral-rich but impoverished regions.


DW
3 days ago
- DW
Australia grants asylum to pro-democracy Hong Kong activist – DW – 08/17/2025
Ted Hui was targeted with a bounty of HK$1 million for his participation in the 2019 pro-democracy protests. Australia on Saturday granted asylum to pro-democracy Hong Kong activist Ted Hui, who is facing criminal charges in the Chinese city over the 2019 pro-democracy protests. In a social media post, Hui confirmed his asylum in Australia. Hui said his asylum application was approved by the Australian Department of Home Affairs on Friday and that his family members were also granted visas. "I express my sincere gratitude to the Government of Australia — both present and former -- for recognising our need for asylum and granting us this protection," he said in a Facebook post on Saturday. Hui is among several pro-democracy activists who fled Hong Kong after they were charged with criminal offenses. They were targeted in 2023 by police bounties of HK$1 million ($1.27 million) each. In a Facebook post, Hui urged the Australian government to do more for other Hong Kong activists who remained jailed. "Australia must do more to rescue them and to speak up for their humanity," Hui said. A prominent critic of China and the Hong Kong authorities, Hui, a former Democratic Party lawmaker, left Hong Kong in 2020. "When people around me say 'congratulations' to me, although I politely thank them, I can't help but feel sad in my heart. How to congratulate a political refugee who misses his hometown?" posted on Facebook. "If it weren't for political persecution, I would never have thought of living in a foreign land. Immigrants can always return to their hometowns to visit relatives at any time. Exiles have no home." To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video