
Thailand unveils global anti-scam platform, but Myanmar, Laos and Cambodia not among founding members
A worker walks past Thai national flags displayed outside the Queen Sirikit National Convention Center in Bangkok on June 4, 2026. (Photo by Amaury PAUL / AFP) Mizzima Thailand launched what officials called the world’s
A worker walks past Thai national flags displayed outside the Queen Sirikit National Convention Center in Bangkok on June 4, 2026. (Photo by Amaury PAUL / AFP) Mizzima Thailand launched what officials called the world’s first intelligence-sharing platform against transnational call-center scam networks and human trafficking on 3 July, with ten countries joining as founding members while Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar — the countries most frequently linked to the region’s scam compounds — were absent from the initial rollout. The platform, formally named the Scam and Human Trafficking Information Exchange and Linked Database, or SHIELD, was unveiled at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Bangkok during the closing ceremony of an international dialogue on countering cyber-scam and forced criminality, jointly organized by the Royal Thai Police and the ministry, according to Bangkok Post and Xinhua. Australia, China, India, Japan, Malaysia, Nepal, the Philippines, South Korea, the United States and Vietnam joined as the first participating countries, along with the UN Office on Drugs and Crime and the International Organization for Migration, the outlets reported. Asked why Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar were not included, despite being frequently linked to scam-center operations, Pol. Gen. Thatchai Pitaneelaboot, deputy national police chief and director of the Royal Thai Police’s Anti-Human Trafficking Center, said future participation “would depend on mutual trust and consent,” according to Bangkok Post. The three excluded countries include the border areas of Myanmar’s Kayin (Karen) State, where compounds such as KK Park and Shwe Kokko have operated for years under the protection of the Karen National Army, formerly known as the Border Guard Force — a militia aligned with Myanmar’s military junta and distinct from the Karen National Union, the ethnic Karen political and armed organization that has resisted the military for decades and intensified fighting after the 2021 coup. Investigations have linked the compounds’ origins to Chinese organized-crime figures, according to a report by the Human Development Forum Foundation. Myanmar and Laos had taken part in an earlier consultation on the SHIELD system in January, when Thai police briefed a wider group of countries on the platform’s development, according to Vietnamese state media reporting at the time. Neither country was listed among SHIELD’s ten founding members at the July launch. The post Thailand unveils global anti-scam platform, but Myanmar, Laos and Cambodia not among founding members appeared first on ENG.MIZZIMA.COM.
多角的分析
直接の経済ニュースではありませんが、治安と司法の信頼は地域経済の土台です。職場での暴力や未成年者保護への不安が強まると、夜間営業、観光、雇用、地域サービス業のリスク認識が高まります。
投資家目線では、個別事件よりも法執行の予見可能性が焦点です。加害者への対応が曖昧になれば、ローカルビジネスの統治リスクや従業員保護の弱さとして評価されやすくなります。
設立メンバーで問われるのは、加害者個人だけでなく、雇用主、警察、近隣社会が被害のサインをどう扱ったかです。労働者が声を上げたことで、事件は噂話ではなく、記録され検証される公共問題に変わります。
市民にとっては、自分や家族が被害に遭った時に公正な手続きへアクセスできるのかが最大の関心です。地域団体が声を上げることで、事件の風化を防ぎ、被害者側の孤立を和らげる意味があります。
背景・歴史的文脈
このニュースは、ミャンマーの地域社会で法の支配と弱者保護がどこまで機能しているかを映す事案です。暴力事件そのものに加え、女性団体や市民社会が司法手続きを求めて声を上げている点が重要です。軍政下では警察・司法への信頼が揺らぎやすく、個別事件が地域の不安や統治への不信に直結します。
原文ソース
Mizzima English