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17-04-2026 13:18 HKT




The suspect - who used the alias "Yan Shiliu" - was a Chinese national identified earlier by mainland media as Yan Wenlei.
The joint efforts of the ministry's task force and the Chinese Embassy in Thailand, helped by Thai law enforcement, led to the arrest of a "major criminal suspect" on Saturday, the ministry said.
Wang Xing, a 31-year-old Chinese actor, traveled to Thailand early this month after receiving an unsolicited offer to join a film that was shooting in Thailand.
When Wang got to Bangkok, he was kidnapped and taken to an online scam compound, one of hundreds of thousands of people the United Nations says have been trapped into working for criminal networks running fraudulent telecommunications operations across the region. Wang's case drew national interest after his girlfriend began a social media campaign about his plight, and he was later freed by Thai police who found him in Myanmar.The ministry said police will step up efforts to crack down on the scam centers, deepen international law enforcement cooperation, and coordinate with countries involved to detain the criminals and rescue Chinese citizens. The scam compounds that have proliferated in Southeast Asia since the pandemic, scamming people across the globe and generating billions of dollars every year for organized crime groups.
Last week, officials from China, Myanmar and Thailand reached a consensus on eradicating the centers in Myanmar.China and Thailand also agreed to set up a coordination center in Bangkok to investigate and combat the scam complexes that have mushroomed along the Thai border with Myanmar and Cambodia. The initiative is expected to start operations next month.
Agencies and Staff reporter
