Filipinos repatriated from Southeast Asian trafficking hubs on the rise: foreign affairs department

The number of Filipino trafficking victims from Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, and Thailand has risen to over 600 since the start of 2025. Most recently, the government repatriated 120 distressed overseas Filipinos.

Jane Bautista

Jane Bautista

Philippine Daily Inquirer

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This pool photo taken on July 17, 2025 and released on July 18 by Agence Kampuchea Presse shows military police looking at computers, smartphones and other equipment seized during a raid on a scam centre in Kandal province, Cambodia. PHOTO: AFP

August 19, 2025

MANILA – The Philippine government has recorded a growing number of Filipinos repatriated from Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, and Thailand after allegedly falling victim to human trafficking and being forced to work in scam hubs in these countries.

Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) spokesperson Angelica Escalona said the agency is alarmed as the number of Filipino trafficking victims from the four nations has risen to over 600 since the start of 2025.

“At present, there are still 148 pending cases of human trafficking victims in these countries,” Escalona said in a press briefing organized by the Inter-Agency Council Against Trafficking (IACAT) on Monday.

Most recently, the government repatriated 120 distressed overseas Filipinos who were possible victims of trafficking and related crimes from Laos, Myanmar, and Cambodia.

IACAT reported that of the total, 77 were rescued from Laos, 37 from Myanmar, and five from Cambodia.

Many victims were reportedly lured by fraudulent online job offers, while others were promised high-paying positions but ended up working under abusive and exploitative conditions.

READ: DFA raises alarm on Filipinos trapped in Southeast Asia scam hubs

The council also cited cases among the Myanmar repatriates, including one woman who was forced by her employer to abort her child to keep working, and another who was raped by her Chinese team leader.

Data from the Ninoy Aquino International Airport Task Force Against Trafficking show that the Philippines has repatriated a total of 695 Filipinos this year, most from the four Southeast Asian countries.

Escalona said the DFA is undertaking diplomatic interventions through bilateral and multilateral talks with Southeast Asian neighbors to address the transnational crime.

Assistant Migrant Workers Secretary Jerome Alcantara explained that the high number of repatriates from these countries is linked to the presence of scam hubs.

“In areas with problems in law and order and insurgency, perpetrators take advantage of the situation to evade protection and law enforcement actions. Many still fall victim to scam hubs, and it’s not something you can just walk into and immediately pull out our citizens,” he said.

IACAT Executive Director Hannah Lizette Manalili, meanwhile, highlighted the limits of government authority once victims leave the Philippines.

While bilateral and multilateral engagements with host countries are ongoing, Manalili said IACAT is also coordinating with its counterpart agencies abroad, as they are the ones “who understand the issue of human trafficking in these scam hubs.”

“Although the process is quite lengthy, that is the reality. This is why we are strengthening prevention, because it is much harder to go after perpetrators once they are outside the country,” she said.

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