Crackdown in Southeast Asia pushes scam networks to Sri Lanka
Police have arrested more than 1,000 foreigners this year, as scam networks displaced from Southeast Asia expand into Sri Lanka.
- Since the start of 2026, police have arrested more than 1,000 foreigners for alleged cybercrime, Assistant Superintendent Fredrick Wootler said, marking a sharp increase from 430 arrests throughout 2024.
- Criminal syndicates displaced from Cambodia and Myanmar are shifting operations to Sri Lanka, exploiting the island's 30-day tourist visas and reliable internet infrastructure.
- In recent weeks, police "carried out five raids" in the coastal districts of Galle and Matara, netting 192 Indian suspects and 29 Nepalis, following 280 arrests near Colombo last week.
- Immigration authorities are now directly supporting police investigations to address the surge, with Wootler stating the government is deporting visa overstayers and ensuring online criminals are "punished by our courts."
- A United Nations report estimates at least 300,000 people have been trafficked into similar compounds across Southeast Asia, while Beijing's embassy in Colombo pledged closer cooperation with local law enforcement.
14 Articles
14 Articles
Sri Lanka sees surge in foreign scam arrests as cyber gangs shift from Cambodia and Myanmar
COLOMBO, May 18 — A surge in arrests of suspected foreign scammers in Sri Lanka has authorities concerned that the island is fast becoming a hub for online crime, following sweeping crackdowns in hotspots Cambodia and Myanmar.Officials say some scam networks forced out of countries in South-east Asia have simply shifted to new bases, increasingly moving operations to Sri Lanka — an attractive destination due to a relaxed visa regime and reliable…
Is Sri Lanka on its way to becoming a new "hub" of international cybercrime? Heavyly repressed in Cambodia or Burma, Internet crooks seem to have redeployed to the island of South Asia, where arrests are increasing. ...
Crackdown in Southeast Asia pushes scam networks to Sri Lanka
China, which has stepped up cooperation with regional governments in recent years to crack down on scam networks, has acknowledged the geographical shift.
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