Cyber
criminals targeting victims in China have increasingly exploited technological
advances to operate from countries such as Fiji in a bid to evade authorities
|
Fiji has deported 77
Chinese nationals accused of running a phone and online scam targeting victims
in mainland China, the latest in a series of overseas crackdowns orchestrated
by Beijing.
AFP
report continues:
The
mass arrest and expulsion was part of a month-long operation involving both
Fijian and Chinese law enforcement agencies, and echoes similar joint
operations carried out in Indonesia and Cambodia last week.
Cyber
criminals targeting victims in China have increasingly exploited technological
advances to operate from abroad in a bid to evade authorities.
The
Fiji-based ring is suspected of involvement in more than 50 telecom and online
fraud cases, and cost victims in China more than six million yuan (US$892,000),
Fijian police said Tuesday, without giving precise details of the scams.
"These
77 Chinese nationals have been sent back to China from Fiji on August 4,
2017," the Fiji police and Chinese embassy in Suva said in a joint
statement.
The
accused were flown to Changchun in northeast China's Jilin Province.
China's
official Xinhua news agency said the scam came to light after one of the
victims was swindled out of 1.3 million yuan and committed suicide, triggering
a large-scale investigation.
The
probe exposed an illegal online gambling and lottery gang involving more than
200 suspects based in China, Indonesia and Fiji who had illegally taken nearly
100 million yuan.
A
team of Chinese police were sent to Fiji four weeks ago and on July 18 they
arrested the 77 suspects and confiscated equipment, including mobile phones,
computers and bank cards.
Another
83 people were arrested in China.
Beijing
has become increasingly assertive in extraditing overseas fraud suspects.
Last
week, Indonesia deported 143 people, including 22 Taiwanese, to China over
fraud cases, days after police said they had busted a sprawling US$450 million
cyber fraud ring targeting wealthy businessmen and politicians in China.
The
deportations drew a strong protest from Taiwan, which said the Taiwanese
suspects should have been returned to the island.
Taiwan's
representative office in Suva said it had been assured by Fiji police that the
77 deported from the South Pacific nation were all nationals of the People's
Republic of China.
Also last week, Cambodia arrested more than 200 Chinese men and women suspected of running an online scam that persuaded victims to send nude photographs and then extorted them for cash, after a tip-off from Chinese authorities.
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