Selangor Journal
Several of the 24 Malaysians who were successfully brought home by the Foreign Affairs Ministry from Phnom Penh, Cambodia, after being freed from captivity as victims of job scams, at the arrival lobby of the Kuala Lumpur International Airport 2 (klia2), Sepang, on September 9, 2022. — Picture by BERNAMA

Most alleged trafficking cases tied to fraud operations — Wisma Putra

KUALA LUMPUR, July 1 — About 90 per cent of Malaysians claimed to be victims of human trafficking were found not to be actual victims but rather involved in international fraud syndicates.

Deputy Foreign Minister Datuk Mohamad Alamin said this was revealed by the Royal Malaysia Police (PDRM) in their human trafficking report presented at the Council for Anti-Trafficking In Persons and Anti-Smuggling of Migrants meeting on February 26.

He said those purported to be victims often held high-ranking positions within their companies and some were even working voluntarily in the involved countries.

“So, it is not generally a job scam; they are criminals involved in fraud syndicates. When they face issues such as abuse by employers or are not allowed to return home, they then come forward and claim to have been deceived.

“But they are part of these job scam operations. This is the report we received from PDRM,” Mohamad said during the Special Chamber session in Dewan Rakyat today.

He was responding to a supplementary question from Kota Melaka MP Khoo Poay Tiong who asked on the government’s efforts to address the issue of Malaysians being trafficked.

Khoo earlier suggested monitoring Malaysians who receive job offers abroad, increasing awareness campaigns on human trafficking issues and enhancing Asean cooperation to combat the problem.

Mohamad said observations indicate a decline in the number of reports received, but acknowledged that some Malaysians are still working with these syndicates.

These syndicates recruit Malaysians through social media advertisements on platforms including Facebook, WeChat, and WhatsApp, offering attractive incentives like high salaries, free flights, accommodation, and the freedom to gamble on credit.

“When they reach their destination, they work as scammers, conducting various online fraud operations including love scams, Macau scams, or running online casinos,” he said.

As of June 10, the Foreign Affair Ministry, in collaboration with PDRM and foreign authorities, have successfully rescued 659 Malaysians involved in job offer scam syndicates abroad.

“There are still 187 individuals being traced, bringing the total number of involved Malaysians to 846. This number is based on reports from relatives, family members, friends, PDRM and the individuals themselves,” Mohamad said.

As such, local media reports claiming that around 2,000 Malaysians are still trapped abroad as victims of human trafficking are inconsistent with the number of reports received by the Foreign Ministry and therefore cannot be confirmed.

Regarding Asean cooperation, Mohamad said this could be further explored, especially in terms of intelligence sharing and the implementation of measures to eradicate job offer scam syndicates, considering that Malaysia will chair Asean next year.

— Bernama

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