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Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
World

Cambodia sentences six for murder of Korean student

Police officers escort South Korean deportees suspected of being involved in online scam operations in Cambodia, upon their arrival at Incheon International Airport on Oct 18, 2025. (Photo: Reuters)

PHNOM PENH - ⁠A ⁠Cambodian court has convicted ​and sentenced six Chinese nationals to life in prison on ​charges they tortured and ‌murdered a South Korean student involved with one of Cambodia’s notorious scam centres, a court spokesperson said on Wednesday.

The student’s death in August last year kicked off a diplomatic ​firestorm with ⁠Seoul, which issued travel bans for parts of Cambodia, imposed sanctions and launched joint efforts to crack down on the sprawling ‌centres, which have been accused of enslaving and abusing workers and stealing billions of dollars from scam victims around the world.

The Kampot Provincial Court ⁠found all six men guilty of torture, murder and aggravated fraud, the spokesperson said in a statement.

According to an autopsy report released by Korean authorities in November, the 22-year-old victim died from blunt force trauma after ​beatings and torture.

Southeast Asia has emerged in recent years as an epicentre of the global cyberfraud industry. ​Compounds which ‌are mostly run by Chinese criminal gangs and staffed partly by trafficking victims living in brutal conditions have ​proliferated ⁠across Cambodia, Laos, the Philippines and lawless areas of the Myanmar-Thai border.

Many of these countries have ⁠been pressured to crack down by foreign governments like the United States, which estimates that Americans lost $10 billion to Southeast Asian scam centres in 2024.

Cambodia has extradited ⁠to China a number of senior individuals accused ​of leading scam syndicates.

The United Nations estimates hundreds of thousands of people have worked in the centres, some lured with the promise of a well-paid ‌job but many ⁠forced to do so under ​threats of violence.

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