Pakistanis among hundreds flee to Thailand after Myanmar scam centre raid

By Reuters
October 23, 2025

"All actions are in line with legal and humanitarian principles," says Myanmar's military

This screengrab from Thai PBS video footage taken in Mae Sot on October 22, 2025 and received by AFPTV on October 23, 2025 shows people crossing a section of the Moei river near KK Park in Myanmar (R) to Thailand. — AFP

Nearly 700 foreigners, including Pakistanis, have fled Myanmar and crossed into Thailand, the Thai army said on Thursday, following a military operation against the KK Park, a notorious cybercrime compound.

Thailand has detained 677 people, including 618 men and 59 women, after they crossed the border into Tak province, it said in a statement.

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Myanmar's military has taken control of KK Park and is inspecting the area, driving a large number of people into Thailand, the statement said.

The people are now undergoing legal procedures and screening, and Thai authorities have also made additional detention facilities available in case existing spaces become insufficient, the army said.

This screengrab from Thai PBS video footage taken on October 22, 2025 and received by AFPTV on October 23, 2025 shows Thai soldiers keeping watch as people, believed to have crossed over to Thailand from Myanmar after escaping from scam centres, board a vehicle in Mae Sot. — AFP

"All actions are in line with legal and humanitarian principles," it said, adding that it was working closely with local security agencies to maintain order along the Thai-Myanmar border.

The group consists primarily of individuals from India and China, with smaller numbers from Vietnam, Pakistan, Indonesia and several other countries, the army said.

Myanmar's KK Park is a notorious enclave known to international law enforcement and diplomats for its involvement in cyberscams.

This aerial photo taken on September 17, 2025 shows the KK Park complex in Myanmar's eastern Myawaddy township, as pictured from Mae Sot district in Thailand's border province of Tak. — AFP

KK Park's sprawling compound and others nearby are run primarily by Chinese criminal gangs and guarded by local militia groups aligned to Myanmar's military.

Border areas between Thailand, Myanmar, Laos and Cambodia have become hubs for online fraud since the COVID-19 pandemic, and the United Nations says billions of dollars have been earned from the trafficking of hundreds of thousands of people forced to work in scam compounds.


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