Inside the dark world of Philippine scam centers

Inside the dark world of Philippine scam centers

/ 03:48 PM July 25, 2024

Inside the dark world of Philippine scam centers

This photo taken on July 18, 2024, shows a room inside of a scam center in Manila that has been shut down by police. Scam centers have mushroomed across Southeast Asia, with crime syndicates luring, kidnapping or coercing workers into predatory online activity, and raking in billions of dollars. (Photo by JAM STA ROSA / Agence France-Presse) / TO GO WITH: Philippines-crime-trafficking-politics, FOCUS by Allison Jackson and Cecil Morella

MANILA, Philippines — It started with a raid on a Chinese-run online gambling center north of Manila where hundreds of foreigners and Filipinos were forced to run scams or risk torture.

Then came explosive allegations that the local mayor was involved in the illicit operation – and that she was a Chinese national masquerading as a Filipina.

Article continues after this advertisement

The scandal stunned the nation and fueled calls for the government to ban the online gambling industry over its links to financial scams, kidnapping, prostitution, human trafficking, torture, and murder.

FEATURED STORIES

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. outlawed Philippine offshore gaming operators (Pogos) this week, saying “the grave abuse and disrespect to our system of laws must stop,” and foreign workers involved have been given two months to leave the Philippines.

Authorities believe there could be several hundred illegal online gambling entities – as well as a good number of the more than 40 licensed operators – that are running scam centers under the noses of public officials.

Article continues after this advertisement

Alice Leal Guo, the mayor of Bamban, where the raided scam center was meters from the municipal hall, has been accused of human trafficking and money laundering in relation to the operation of offshore gaming.

Article continues after this advertisement

Guo has been suspended from her job as mayor and is in hiding after a warrant was issued for her arrest. She has denied the allegations against her.

Article continues after this advertisement

“It seems Alice Guo is only the tip of an iceberg,” Senator Risa Hontiveros told a Senate committee investigating the online gambling industry.

“This committee hearing is in the process of uncovering a deep and deadly web of bad actors involving international criminal syndicates, local and national politicians, and perhaps malevolent elements of a foreign state.”

Article continues after this advertisement

The sprawling Bamban complex, which was operated by Chinese nationals and included office buildings, luxury villas, and a large swimming pool, was raided in March after a Vietnamese worker escaped and called police.

More than 700 Filipinos, Chinese, Vietnamese, Malaysians, Taiwanese, Indonesians, and Rwandans were found on site, along with documents allegedly showing that Guo was president of a company that owned the compound.

“She really needs to answer for this in jail,” said Winston Casio, spokesman for the Presidential Anti-Organized Crime Commission (PAOCC).

‘Heads need to roll’

Scam centers have mushroomed across Southeast Asia, with crime syndicates luring, kidnapping or coercing workers into predatory online activity, and raking in billions of dollars.

Victims have reported traveling across the region, often on the pretense of romance or high-paying jobs but finding themselves forced instead to cajole people into ploughing money into fake investment platforms and other ruses.

Inside the dark world of Philippine scam centers

This photo taken on July 18, 2024, shows a detained former scam center worker walking along the detention rooms of a scam center in Manila that has been shut down by police. Scam centers have mushroomed across Southeast Asia, with crime syndicates luring, kidnapping or coercing workers into predatory online activity, and raking in billions of dollars. (Photo by JAM STA ROSA / Agence France-Presse) / TO GO WITH: Philippines-crime-trafficking-politics, FOCUS by Allison Jackson and Cecil Morella

In the Philippines, scam centers are often disguised as online gambling operations, which are mostly run by Chinese nationals and target people overseas.

Official figures show more than 60,000 foreigners and Filipinos are working for licensed online gambling companies. Casio estimates as many as 100,000 could be employed by the illegal Pogos.

READ: Over 800 Filipinos, foreign Pogo workers rescued in Tarlac raid

They flourished under former president Rodrigo Duterte after the government regulator was given the right to issue operating licenses nationwide.

Many lost their licenses in 2023 and went underground. Authorities are now racing to shut them all down.

Five have been raided since 2023, with several thousand foreigners repatriated, expelled or charged, Casio told AFP at his office inside one of the scam centers targeted.

Casio said “heads need to roll” among public officials, including mayors and police chiefs, who have allowed the scam centers to operate in plain sight.

“If we don’t start bringing people to court, if we don’t start asking these people to spend time in jail, then we won’t put an end to this problem,” Casio said.

Inside the dark world of Philippine scam centers

This photo taken on July 18, 2024, shows Presidential Anti-Organized Crime Commission (PAOCC) spokesperson Winston Casio showing a room of a scam center in Manila that has been shut down by police. Scam centers have mushroomed across Southeast Asia, with crime syndicates luring, kidnapping or coercing workers into predatory online activity, and raking in billions of dollars. (Photo by JAM STA ROSA / Presidential Anti-Organized Crime Commission (PAOCC) / Agence France-Presse)

‘I don’t want to scam’

Inside the Bamban compound, victims engaged in online scams under threat of physical harm or other punishment.

Dylan, a Malaysian national in his 20s, worked there for a month after a friend tricked him into visiting the complex.

Once inside, Dylan said he wasn’t allowed to leave. He suspects that his friend sold him to the Chinese bosses in exchange for his own freedom.

Dylan, who used a pseudonym for the interview with AFP because he is a state witness, said he was forced to use Chinese matchmaking sites to contact parents looking for a husband for their daughter.

Inside the dark world of Philippine scam centers

This photo taken on July 18, 2024, shows a police officer guarding the entrance of a scam center in Manila that has been shut down by police. Scam centers have mushroomed across Southeast Asia, with crime syndicates luring, kidnapping or coercing workers into predatory online activity, and raking in billions of dollars. (Photo by JAM STA ROSA / Agence France-Presse) / TO GO WITH: Philippines-crime-trafficking-politics, FOCUS by Allison Jackson and Cecil Morella

After he was introduced to the woman, he would try to convince her to invest in a fake Chinese oil company in Dubai.

READ: Vital documents vs Pogo execs seized in Clark

Scammers were expected to meet a monthly target of 300,000 yuan ($41,200) or risk being tortured, he said.

They received a 10 percent commission but no salary and had to work at least 12 hours a day, seven days a week.

Dylan said he was beaten once and feared for his life.

“I don’t want to scam, I just want to survive, just do my job every day,” Dylan told AFP at the PAOCC office where he is being held.

‘A fake Filipino’

Guo’s nationality has been a key focus of the Senate probe, which comes as relations between Manila and Beijing worsen over disputes in the South China Sea.

The National Bureau of Investigation told the inquiry that Guo’s fingerprints matched those of a Chinese national who had been given a special investor resident visa along with her Chinese mother.

“This confirms what I have suspected all along. Mayor Alice is a fake Filipino,” Hontiveros said in a statement.

“She is a Chinese national masquerading as Filipino citizen to facilitate crimes being committed by POGO (online gambling operation).”

Alice Guo

FILE PHOTO: Alice Guo. INQUIRER/MARIANNE BERMUDEZ

Authorities have frozen assets belonging to Guo and others linked to the scam center, including 90 bank accounts, properties, luxury vehicles and a helicopter.

Casio fears Guo may try to evade arrest by changing her appearance at one of the clandestine hospitals set up by scam center to treat their workers.

A recent raid on an illegal medical facility found equipment used for cosmetic surgery.

“You could basically get in there as one person and get out a totally whole new person,” Casio said.

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

“That’s how sophisticated the operation was.”

TAGS: Alice Guo, POGO, scam

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our newsletter!

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

© Copyright 1997-2024 INQUIRER.net | All Rights Reserved

This is an information message

We use cookies to enhance your experience. By continuing, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn more here.