Malaysia

Southeast Asia’s booming scam industry eyes Malaysia

Malaysians have frequently been victimised, lured by fraudulent job offers to notorious scam compounds in Cambodia and Myanmar, where they faced coercion and abuse.

Updated 25 seconds ago · Published on 04 Jun 2026 7:29AM

Southeast Asia’s booming scam industry eyes Malaysia
Hundreds of thousands of people are being trafficked from across Asia and beyond. - June 4, 2026

By Murray Hunter

SOUTHEAST Asia has become the epicentre of the global online scam industry, generating tens of billions of dollars annually through sophisticated fraud operations involving human trafficking and forced labour.

Estimates suggest the cyber-enabled fraud business in the Mekong region alone produces around US$40 – US$44 billion per year, with some broader global scam loss figures reaching hundreds of billions.

Hundreds of thousands of people are being trafficked from across Asia and beyond.

They are assumed to be trapped in these operations, which run romance scams, fake investment schemes, and impersonation frauds targeting victims worldwide, including Americans who lost at least $10 billion in 2024–2025.

Malaysia has long been entangled in this crisis.

There are hundreds of unsolved missing persons cases in Malaysia.

Malaysians have frequently been victimised, lured by fraudulent job offers to notorious scam compounds in Cambodia and Myanmar, where they faced coercion and abuse.

At the same time, Malaysian nationals have been linked to syndicates as facilitators, recruiters, or operators in cross-border networks.

Past raids in Malaysia exposed local call centres and enablers supporting regional scam ecosystems.

With Cambodia intensifying its crackdown in 2025–2026, shutting down hundreds of compounds, deporting thousands of suspects, and extraditing high-profile figures like tycoon Chen Zhi, criminal networks are adapting.

Experts warn that syndicates are dispersing into smaller, mobile operations across borders, with Malaysia emerging as a potential new base alongside Indonesia and others. Operators increasingly favour urban apartments, hotels, and offices to evade detection while continuing their lucrative frauds, often enhanced by AI tools.

Malaysian police have mounted a strong response in recent weeks and months. Major operations, including one in the Klang Valley, dismantled several international syndicates, arresting 187 individuals of various nationalities and seizing assets worth RM57.68 million.

Nationwide efforts from early 2026 have detained over 2,200 suspected scammers.

These raids target both foreign syndicates exploiting Malaysia’s visa policies and local enablers.

However, authorities caution that scammers are shifting to more sophisticated, harder-to-detect models. Enforcement alone risks displacement without stronger regional cooperation on trafficking, money laundering, and border security.

The human toll is immense, with thousands displaced or still exploited in a resilient criminal network.

As pressure in Cambodia forces relocation, Malaysia and its neighbours must sustain vigilance and collaboration to avoid becoming the next major haven for these fraud factories.

Success hinges on dismantling the networks, not merely shifting their locations. – June 4, 2026

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