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Philippines Repatriates Trio to China to Face Gambling-Linked Kidnapping Charges

  • Human traffickers often use promises of jobs to lure their victims
  • Embassy warned of “tough measures” Beijing uses to combat kidnapping, gambling
  • Earlier this month, Philippine police busted plastic surgery ops linked to scam centers
Man looking out an airplane window
The Philippines has repatriated three nationals to China to face charges of alleged gambling-linked kidnapping. [Image: Shutterstock.com]

Joint Philippine and Chinese operations have resulted in a trio of nationals repatriated to China to face kidnapping charges allegedly linked to gambling.

The Manila Standard on Monday cited the Chinese Embassy as stating that the three departed the Philippines over the weekend to face the music in their homeland. The repatriation of the trio was, according to the Chinese Embassy, driven by a “strong determination of the two countries to jointly combat kidnapping and other crimes related to offshore gambling.”

Human traffickers in scam centers operating out of the Philippines and Southeast Asia lure victims with job offers to leave their homelands, only to have passports and mobile phones confiscated. The essentially kidnapped victims are forced to work on online scams including casinos, dating, and crypto schemes.

In March, police freed over 1,000 men and women captively working in an online dating scam center in the Philippine municipality of Bambam after serving a search warrant on Chinese-owned firm.

On Sunday, the embassy used the trio’s repatriation to remind other perpetrators that it’s against Chinese law to engage in any form of gambling: “Online gambling, cross-border gambling by Chinese nationals, and running casinos outside China to solicit Chinese nationals are all illegal in China.”

“tough measures” Beijing employs to crack down on kidnapping

The embassy in the Philippine capital of Manila warned of the “tough measures” Beijing employs to crack down on kidnapping and gambling crimes.

In June, the Chinese Embassy stated Philippine Offshore Gaming Operators (POGOs) were a breeding ground for “serious crimes such as kidnapping for ransom, human trafficking and murder.”

Earlier this month police raids on two hospitals in the Philippines revealed plastic surgery operations for clients that allegedly include scam center workers and illegal online casino operatives. In December 2022, Philippine officials arrested a suspected Chinese mafia operative who allegedly underwent plastic surgery to avoid the police.

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