( Observer Network News) "I can't live in Taiwan, it doesn't matter if I die in Cambodia , I would rather die there." According to a report by Dongsen News Network on the 19th, a Taiwanese man who was defrauded recently said this Police officers responded to dissuade him from going to Cambodia.

reported that recently, the New Taipei City police in Taiwan discovered three human trafficking gangs. After arresting 15 suspects, they rushed to the airport to try to stop the six victims who were about to leave the country. The six people, all aged between 21 and 36, believed the lies of the fraud group and thought they could get a monthly salary of US$40,000 in Cambodia as long as they could type.
Five of them did not board the plane after being dissuaded by the police and gave up the idea of going out to work. However, one insisted on boarding the plane and said that he "cannot survive" in Taiwan and "it doesn't matter if he dies there" and believed that "even if there is Even if it’s dangerous, I have to give it a try.” So I insisted on boarding the plane. Later, the relevant departments on the island reported the matter to the Thai police, and the Thai police deported him.
A similar case also occurred in Kaohsiung . A man in his 30s decided to fly to Cambodia to find a job at the instigation of his childhood friend, and secretly obtained all the documents without telling his family. When his family found out, he had already bought a ticket and insisted on leaving. The police came to dissuade him, but the man refused to listen. In the end, his parents reported the case and asked the police to cancel the man's ID, and the matter came to an end temporarily.
Earlier this month, the police on the island stopped a 31-year-old man named Su at the airport. The man claimed that a woman named Fangfang invited him to work in a Cambodian casino. In addition to food, accommodation and air tickets, the man also had high salary and benefits. Claiming this was a "God-given opportunity." When the police told him that about 90% of people who went to Cambodia to find jobs were controlled by human traffickers, the man actually replied, "I am 10% of the chosen ones." Another woman who was suspected of being deceived into Cambodia told the police Said, "I'm so short of money that I'm about to be kidnapped by ghosts. I'm desperate!" "I'd rather die in Cambodia!"
According to TVBS news reports, from the end of July to the 14th of this month, the Taiwan police held billboards at the airport to remind the public to be careful of the traps of working overseas, and successfully blocked 26 fraud cases, but 73 people still insisted on leaving the country.
A senior criminal police officer in Taiwan believes that this is another kind of tragedy for Taiwanese young people. Most of the Taiwanese people who are willing to go to Cambodia have low academic qualifications and insufficient work ability. They cannot find jobs in Taiwan, and most of them are not getting along with their relatives, or even He has severed ties with his family members, has no contact with them, and has become a marginalized person in society due to various factors. Only then would he rather risk his life to venture out. The various tragic experiences make people shake their heads.

When fraud cases occur frequently, the DPP only sent people to hold up placards at the airport to intercept them, which caused dissatisfaction among public opinion on the island.
html On the 18th, China Times News Network published a comment stating that incidents of Taiwanese people being defrauded overseas were frequently reported, and relevant authorities did not act. They also took the lead in launching campaigns targeting so-called "whistleblowers", workers in Cambodia, and rescuers. Three waves of public opinion offensive. In the first wave of, an Internet celebrity from the island who went to Cambodia to rescue people once filmed a video to introduce the rescue process. Unexpectedly, the foreign affairs department quickly denounced this as fake news and asked the public not to spread rumors. The pro-green Internet army also followed suit, making the network angry. Hong retorted, "Is it difficult for the government to admit its mistake?" The second wave of the
pro-green cyber army targeted people who went to work in Cambodia and Southeast Asia, deliberately emphasizing that the defrauded people were indolent, greedy, and just wanted to make quick money, and even spread rumors that they should not be ignored; the third wave of offensive They slandered some rescue operations in Cambodia and Southeast Asia as "two-faced tactics of the underworld" - first abducting people and then rescuing them. They also ridiculed the Kuomintang "legislators" who went to Cambodia to rescue people as "political consumption." The Tsai government itself is unable to save people, and it does not want others to succeed in rescuing people, so it still smeares them. This mentality is really hateful and hateful. The
article questioned the Taiwan authorities. Ever since the incident of Taiwanese people being lured to Cambodia was revealed, the Tsai government has been unwilling and unable to deal with it. There are more and more cases of victimization and the plots have become more and more shocking. However, it has always been loved on Facebook Tsai Ing-wen, who posted on social media such as and Twitter , has not said a word so far. I wonder if she didn’t see it or didn’t feel it?
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