Cambodia likely to deport suspects this week: MOFA
Taipei Times | 24 June 2016
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) yesterday said that 18
Taiwanese implicated in alleged fraudulent activities in Cambodia are likely to
be deported to China by the end of this week, but added that the government is
exploring all diplomatic channels to prevent the move.
At a news conference in Taipei yesterday
morning, ministry spokeswoman Eleanor Wang (王珮玲) said
that according to information the ministry has received, the suspects are
expected to be deported to Beijing before the end of this week.
“With regard to The Associated Press report that
the number of Taiwanese fraud suspects awaiting deportation is 21, we believe
the figure might not be correct,” Wang said.
Wang said that Cambodian law enforcement officials on Monday last week arrested 27 fraud suspects, of whom 13 were Taiwanese, before apprehending four more Taiwanese suspected of fraudulent activities on Saturday last week when they were seeking to leave the nation via Phnom Penh International Airport.
On Sunday, Cambodian police apprehended eight
more fraud suspects whose nationality was originally unclear due to inaccurate
gender information, Wang said, adding that one of them was later reported as
Taiwanese.
“Of the 39 fraud suspects who have been arrested
thus far, 18 of them are Taiwanese,” Wang said.
Cambodian authorities were scheduled to deport
the Taiwanese suspects to China on Tuesday, but canceled the plan.
Wang said Liang Guang-chung (梁光中),
director-general of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Ho Chi Minh
City, and other staff were still working to prevent the deportation, urging the
Cambodian government to adhere to the nationality principle
and deport the Taiwanese suspects to Taiwan.
The Cambodian Ministry of the Interior’s General
Ouk Haiseila, who heads the Immigration Investigation Bureau, on Wednesday said
the Taiwanese suspects, along with 14 Chinese also arrested this month, were to
be sent to China because Cambodia regards Taiwan as a part of China.
The suspects are accused of defrauding people in
China using calls made over the Internet, making them harder to trace.
Haiseila said the arrests, made in raids in
Phnom Penh last week on Thursday and Saturday, were conducted after tip-offs
from Chinese authorities.
Additional reporting by AP
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