The Philippines will likely deport nearly 400 Taiwanese and Chinese arrested in a major telephone scam that swindled millions of dollars from elderly compatriots, police said on Friday.
Police made the arrests during raids on 20 houses across Manila on Thursday, after being tipped off by authorities in Taiwan and China, said Reginald Villasanta, chief of the Philippines’ anti-organized crime task force.
Asked if the suspects would be deported he said: “Before the operation was launched we were provided with the evidence gathered by our counterparts in Taiwan and China. So most likely that is what is going to happen.”
Posing over the phone as police officers or state prosecutors in their homelands, the suspects scared mostly elderly victims into transferring their savings into bank accounts of the gang, Villasanta said.
“They would tell the victims their bank accounts are being used by terrorists or syndicates and should transfer them to a safer account,” Villasanta said. “In reality these accounts are controlled by the syndicate and when the deposits are made they are swiftly cleaned out.”
The gang stole millions of yuan or New Taiwanese dollars every day, he said.
The gang had been under surveillance since last month, Villasanta said. However, police were not sure how long it had been operating in the Philippines.
A total of 385 foreign suspects were arrested along with two Filipinos of Chinese background, said Superintendent Winnie Quidato, operations chief of the task force.
Seventy-eight Taiwanese suspects were arrested in a similar scam in the southern Philippines in April. The suspects were later deported to face charges at home, authorities said.
However, sorting out the Chinese from the Taiwanese in the latest case is proving difficult because the suspects are refusing to cooperate with authorities, Quidato said.
The Philippines has asked the Chinese embassy and the Taipei cultural office for help in identifying them, he added.
In February last year, the Philippines mistakenly deported to China 14 Taiwanese suspects of another scamming operation that had allegedly swindled US$20 million from Chinese victims.
A furious Taiwan denounced the mistake as a blow to economic and cultural ties. China sent the 14 suspects home to Taiwan nearly four months later.
Officials at the Taipei Cultural and Economic Office in the Philippines were not available for comment on Friday. Chinese embassy spokesman Zhang Hua (張華) said the mission had been expected to comment on the arrests on Friday.
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