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MainNewsCambodia’s O...

Cambodia’s Officials Tied to $19B Crypto Scam Network Fueled by Forced Labor, Report Finds


by Hassan Shittu
for Cryptonews
Cambodia’s Officials Tied to $19B Crypto Scam Network Fueled by Forced Labor, Report Finds

Key Takeaways:

  • Report links senior Cambodian officials to supporting a massive scam ecosystem powered by forced labor and digital currencies.
  • The alleged network is anchored by the Huione Group, whose platforms facilitate illicit transactions.
  • Cambodia’s scam operations are reportedly spreading beyond major cities into rural provinces.

Senior Cambodian government officials are allegedly tied to a sprawling, crypto-powered scam network generating up to $19 billion annually, according to a new report by anti-trafficking group Humanity Research Consultancy (HRC) on May 16.

The report, titled “ Policies and Patterns of State-Abetted Transnational Crime in Cambodia as a Global Security Threat,” accuses members of Cambodia’s ruling elite of profiting from and facilitating a transnational fraud economy built on forced labor and untraceable digital currencies.

Source: The Report

Cambodia’s Government Linked to Crypto Scam Economy Worth 60% of GDP

HRC identifies the Huione Group as central infrastructure in what it calls a “vertically integrated” scam industry that now accounts for nearly 60% of Cambodia’s GDP.

The group includes platforms used to move billions in illicit funds, many of which rely on trafficked workers and cryptocurrency rails designed to bypass financial oversight.

“Cambodia is likely the absolute global epicenter of next-gen transnational fraud in 2025,” wrote Jacob Sims, the report’s author and a visiting fellow at Harvard University’s Asia Center.

He accused the Cambodian state of providing support “systematically and insidiously” to these operations.

At the center of the allegations is Huione Guarantee, a Telegram-based escrow platform through which over $4 billion has flowed since 2021, according to the U.S. Treasury. Hun To, a cousin of the current Prime Minister Hun Manet, sits on the board of the Huione Group.

The report also names Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of the Interior Sar Sokha as a co-investor in one of the country’s largest scam compounds. Requests for comment from government offices have not yet received a response.

The report’s findings echo last month’s report, which warned about Southeast Asia’s scam operations expanding globally.

According to HRC, criminal networks are moving out of Sihanoukville and Phnom Penh and into rural provinces like Koh Kong and Pursat, where new scam compounds have emerged since 2022.

The report also indicates the role of crypto in the growth of these scams. Citing blockchain analytics firm Elliptic, it notes that Huione has launched its own stablecoin to process illicit payments outside traditional banking systems.

These tools, the report claims, have driven the global spread of scams such as crypto investment fraud and “pig butchering.”

HRC’s report presents a stark picture of how crypto technology, political power, and organized crime are becoming deeply entangled in Cambodia’s economy, raising international alarm about the unchecked growth of scam compounds and digital financial crime.

Criminal Syndicates Build Custom Crypto Ecosystems to Launder Billions, UN Report Warns

The crypto scam network allegedly tied to Cambodian officials is part of a much larger, rapidly evolving operation spanning Southeast Asia and beyond, according to a new report from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

Criminal syndicates are no longer exploiting existing crypto platforms; they’re now creating their own.

The report shows how groups launch exchanges, stablecoins, gambling apps, and even entire blockchain networks to launder funds and dodge detection.

One prominent example is the Cambodia-based Huione Guarantee, recently rebranded as Haowang.

The platform has processed over $24 billion in crypto since 2020 and serves nearly a million users, the UNODC found. It now operates a proprietary blockchain (Xone Chain), exchange, stablecoin, and even a branded Visa card, introduced in February 2025.

These operations are often backed by forced labor and industrial-scale scam centers in Cambodia, Laos, and Myanmar, where AI and blockchain tools fuel phishing, investment fraud, and pig butchering schemes.

As enforcement tightens, these underground networks are expanding into Africa and Latin America.

Meanwhile, in the first three months of 2025, the crypto market lost $1,635,933,800 across 39 incidents, according to the blockchain security platform Immunefi, indicating the scale and reach of this growing cybercrime ecosystem.

The post Cambodia’s Officials Tied to $19B Crypto Scam Network Fueled by Forced Labor, Report Finds appeared first on Cryptonews.

Read the article at Cryptonews

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Cambodia’s Officials Tied to $19B Crypto Scam Network Fueled by Forced Labor, Report Finds


by Hassan Shittu
for Cryptonews
Cambodia’s Officials Tied to $19B Crypto Scam Network Fueled by Forced Labor, Report Finds

Key Takeaways:

  • Report links senior Cambodian officials to supporting a massive scam ecosystem powered by forced labor and digital currencies.
  • The alleged network is anchored by the Huione Group, whose platforms facilitate illicit transactions.
  • Cambodia’s scam operations are reportedly spreading beyond major cities into rural provinces.

Senior Cambodian government officials are allegedly tied to a sprawling, crypto-powered scam network generating up to $19 billion annually, according to a new report by anti-trafficking group Humanity Research Consultancy (HRC) on May 16.

The report, titled “ Policies and Patterns of State-Abetted Transnational Crime in Cambodia as a Global Security Threat,” accuses members of Cambodia’s ruling elite of profiting from and facilitating a transnational fraud economy built on forced labor and untraceable digital currencies.

Source: The Report

Cambodia’s Government Linked to Crypto Scam Economy Worth 60% of GDP

HRC identifies the Huione Group as central infrastructure in what it calls a “vertically integrated” scam industry that now accounts for nearly 60% of Cambodia’s GDP.

The group includes platforms used to move billions in illicit funds, many of which rely on trafficked workers and cryptocurrency rails designed to bypass financial oversight.

“Cambodia is likely the absolute global epicenter of next-gen transnational fraud in 2025,” wrote Jacob Sims, the report’s author and a visiting fellow at Harvard University’s Asia Center.

He accused the Cambodian state of providing support “systematically and insidiously” to these operations.

At the center of the allegations is Huione Guarantee, a Telegram-based escrow platform through which over $4 billion has flowed since 2021, according to the U.S. Treasury. Hun To, a cousin of the current Prime Minister Hun Manet, sits on the board of the Huione Group.

The report also names Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of the Interior Sar Sokha as a co-investor in one of the country’s largest scam compounds. Requests for comment from government offices have not yet received a response.

The report’s findings echo last month’s report, which warned about Southeast Asia’s scam operations expanding globally.

According to HRC, criminal networks are moving out of Sihanoukville and Phnom Penh and into rural provinces like Koh Kong and Pursat, where new scam compounds have emerged since 2022.

The report also indicates the role of crypto in the growth of these scams. Citing blockchain analytics firm Elliptic, it notes that Huione has launched its own stablecoin to process illicit payments outside traditional banking systems.

These tools, the report claims, have driven the global spread of scams such as crypto investment fraud and “pig butchering.”

HRC’s report presents a stark picture of how crypto technology, political power, and organized crime are becoming deeply entangled in Cambodia’s economy, raising international alarm about the unchecked growth of scam compounds and digital financial crime.

Criminal Syndicates Build Custom Crypto Ecosystems to Launder Billions, UN Report Warns

The crypto scam network allegedly tied to Cambodian officials is part of a much larger, rapidly evolving operation spanning Southeast Asia and beyond, according to a new report from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

Criminal syndicates are no longer exploiting existing crypto platforms; they’re now creating their own.

The report shows how groups launch exchanges, stablecoins, gambling apps, and even entire blockchain networks to launder funds and dodge detection.

One prominent example is the Cambodia-based Huione Guarantee, recently rebranded as Haowang.

The platform has processed over $24 billion in crypto since 2020 and serves nearly a million users, the UNODC found. It now operates a proprietary blockchain (Xone Chain), exchange, stablecoin, and even a branded Visa card, introduced in February 2025.

These operations are often backed by forced labor and industrial-scale scam centers in Cambodia, Laos, and Myanmar, where AI and blockchain tools fuel phishing, investment fraud, and pig butchering schemes.

As enforcement tightens, these underground networks are expanding into Africa and Latin America.

Meanwhile, in the first three months of 2025, the crypto market lost $1,635,933,800 across 39 incidents, according to the blockchain security platform Immunefi, indicating the scale and reach of this growing cybercrime ecosystem.

The post Cambodia’s Officials Tied to $19B Crypto Scam Network Fueled by Forced Labor, Report Finds appeared first on Cryptonews.

Read the article at Cryptonews

Read More

Russian National Arrested Over $730K Seoul Crypto Ambush – Two Suspects Still at Large

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Russian national arrested in Busan has been charged after a violent attempt to steal ...
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