Brutal and criminal
In the same week the UN warned of the brutality and criminality of Chinese-operated casinos in the Golden Triangle of Northeast Asia, the Philippines has moved to rid itself of hundreds of offshore gambling operators (POGOs).
intially deporting about 3,000 Chinese workers in October
On Monday, Philippine Department of Justice (DOJ) spokesperson Jose Dominic Clavano said the DOJ was shuttering 175 online gambling companies, as well as initially deporting about 3,000 Chinese workers in October. The DOJ aims to repatriate 40,000 workers to China by the end of the year.
Clavano said the move to shutter the firms and deport the workers came from “reports of murder, kidnapping and other crimes committed by Chinese nationals against fellow Chinese nationals.”
Clavano’s comments came at the ‘Laging Handa’ public briefing on Monday after the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporation (PAGCOR) scrapped the permits of 175 POGO firms following their alleged links to a series of related crimes, including murder, kidnapping, and prostitution. Officials claim the victims and perpetrators of said crimes are usually Chinese.
The DOJ spokesperson cited video evidence of the POGO’s illegal behavior. He said: “When you see the videos, what Chinese nationals are doing here is dangerous.”
Regional threat
Equivalent illegal Chinese-operated gambling venues in Southeast Asia countries neighboring the Philippines are casting an increasingly darkening pall over the region.
With illegal operations luring thousands of victims to Cambodia and Myanmar (Burma) from other Southeast Asia countries including Thailand, Malaysia, Taiwan, Indonesia, Vietnam, and the Philippines, the latter has moved to ensure that the mostly Chinese-on-Chinese crimes stay that way.
Clavano said the DOJ wants to protect Filipinos, and ensure they won’t become vicitims of the crimes that are linked to the POGOs.
UN warning
According to the Philippine Star, DOJ secretary Jesus Crispin Remulla has already met with the Chinese embassy to facilitate the “smooth” deportation of the 40,000 workers.
The news comes after the Voice of America on Sunday cited the UN Office on Drugs and Crime’s warning of a:
growing criminal threat’ from the Philippines’ neighboring Golden Triangle region.”
The UN department said that the “region’s special economic zones […] and the casinos that often anchor them have also become major trafficking and money laundering hubs for the crime networks.”