A Cambodian court charged two men on Friday for leading protests demanding the unfreezing of demonstrators’ accounts with a financial services firm linked to cyberscams.
Protesters said their accounts with US-sanctioned Huione Group’s digital payments platform H-Pay, previously Huione Pay, had been inaccessible since December last year.
The US government last year accused Huione — which owned several companies offering e-commerce, payment and cryptocurrency exchange services — of laundering funds for transnational criminal groups perpetrating scams from Southeast Asia.
Photo: EPA
Former Huione chairman Li Xiong (李雄) was extradited to China on April 1.
Chinese authorities said he was central to a major transnational gambling and fraud syndicate, and is suspected of multiple crimes.
The two accused — Cambodians Suon Sovanthai, 37, and Vath Makara, 36 — were arrested on Monday during a demonstration outside the National Bank of Cambodia (NBC) in Phnom Penh that left at least two protesters bloodied after clashes with authorities.
The detained men were charged on Friday with incitement to cause serious unrest and obstruction of public traffic outside of the central bank, the Phnom Penh court said in a statement.
The men and their accomplices organized a plan last month and created a Telegram group with 1,200 alleged Huione account holders to rally people “to hold illegal demonstrations,” the court said.
Monday’s protest followed other demonstrations last month outside the NBC and the Chinese embassy in Phnom Penh.
The court alleged the two men hired people to join the protests, paying them 25,000 riel (US$6.22) each, the statement said.
The pair were being held in pre-trial detention.
Protesters has said they have nothing to do with Huione’s alleged crimes and cannot access their assets deposited with the firm, calling on the NBC to intervene.
The NBC has said the Huione platforms’ business licences have been revoked and Huione Pay creditors should go to the courts, while H-Pay creditors could make claims with a liquidator.
Cambodia has emerged as a hub for crime syndicates running fake romantic relationship and cryptocurrency investment schemes in which scammers — some willing, others trafficked — defraud Internet users around the world of billions of dollars annually.
‘ABSURD MISTAKE’: The election commission said that there had been a failure to anticipate turnout after 14 polling stations ran short of ballot papers South Korean riot police yesterday cleared protesters from a Seoul polling station after a 35-hour blockade sparked by a shortage of ballot papers during local elections earlier this week. Wednesday’s election was the first nationwide vote since South Korean President Lee Jae-myung took office following the ouster of Yoon Suk-yeol over his short-lived martial law declaration. Lee’s ruling Democratic Party swept most races, but failed to flip the crucial Seoul mayoral seat. The South Korean National Election Commission apologized, blaming a failure to anticipate turnout after 14 polling stations in Seoul ran short of ballot papers. Some polling stations stayed open until 10pm to
France experienced its hottest spring on record, the French weather service said on Tuesday, after an exceptional early heat wave that also broke highs for the season in England and Wales. Meteo-France said the average nationwide temperature over March to May was 13.8°C — about 1.7°C above the norm, and surpassing records set in 2011 and 2020. “The warmest spring since records began in 1900,” it said in a bulletin. All three months were warmer than average, but the onset of an “unprecedented heatwave” late last month pushed the mercury to highs typically seen at the height of the summer. “Our country had never
A Sherpa guide was found crawling to base camp on Mount Everest a week after he went missing and was reunited with his family, who had given up hope he would return. Dawa Sherpa was last seen on Friday last week descending the mountain, but he did not reach base camp even though his client did. The pair were among the last climbers on the mountain as the climbing season came to an end and the route was dismantled. Dawa was located by a cleaning crew on Thursday morning as he was crawling down the snowy slopes around the Khumbu Icefall, just above
Chinese authorities are snuffing out any remembrance of the deadly 1989 military crackdown on student-led pro-democracy protests in Tiananmen Square, which happened 37 years ago yesterday, in a further tightening of a years-long campaign to erase what happened from public memory. Police told relatives of the victims they would not be allowed to visit a cemetery in Beijing on the anniversary of the crackdown, a person with knowledge of the matter said. Relatives of the victims visited the cemetery on the anniversary for more than 30 years to read memorial statements with police keeping watch, Amnesty International said. Hundreds of people,