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Cambodia extradites alleged cybercrime kingpin to China
Published in The Saudi Gazette on 08 - 01 - 2026

Cambodia says it has extradited to China a prominent businessman accused of running one of Asia's largest criminal networks that trafficked workers and forced them to defraud victims globally.
Chen Zhi, 38, a national of China and Cambodia, was extradited on Tuesday after a months-long investigation by the two countries, Cambodia's Interior Ministry said in a statement.
Chen was arrested on 6 January with two other Chinese nationals, the ministry said, adding that his Cambodian citizenship has been revoked.
The operation was conducted at the request of the Chinese government, the ministry said, though it is unclear what charges Chen faces in China. He was arrested alongside two other Chinese nationals.
Chen is the founder and chairman of Prince Group, which bills itself as one of Cambodia's biggest conglomerates, with investments in luxury real estate, banking services, hotels, and major construction developments.
But US federal prosecutors say his business empire was fueled by forced labor and cryptocurrency scams that conned victims the world over and at one point were allegedly earning Chen and his associates $30 million every day.
In October, the US Treasury Department and UK Foreign Office sanctioned Prince Group and dozens of its affiliates, designating them transnational criminal organizations. Chen was charged in absentia in New York with money laundering conspiracy and wire fraud conspiracy, along with several associates.
Prosecutors also seized $15 billion in cryptocurrency from Chen following a years-long investigation, in what the Justice Department said was the largest forfeiture action in its history.
Since the indictment was announced, several other jurisdictions including Singapore, Thailand, Hong Kong and Taiwan announced seizures or freezes of hundreds of millions of dollars in assets linked to Chen.
CNN has reached out to lawyers representing Prince Group for comment on Chen's arrest. Prince Group has previously denied engaging in unlawful activity, calling the allegations "baseless" and "aimed at justifying the unlawful seizure of assets," according to a statement published on its website.
China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said "relevant Chinese authorities" would release information regarding the case at a later date.
"For a period of time, China has been actively cooperating with Cambodia and other countries to combat cross-border telecommunications and online fraud, achieving significant results," ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said at a press briefing Thursday.
Cambodia has recently come under more pressure to act against the scam networks operating within its borders. In its statement, the interior ministry said Chen's arrest was "within the scope of cooperation in combating transnational crime."
The United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime has said the criminal networks that run the scam hubs are evolving at an unprecedented scale, despite highly publicized crackdowns last year.
"This arrest reflects sustained international pressure finally reaching a point where continued inaction became untenable for Phnom Penh," said Jacob Sims, visiting fellow at Harvard University's Asia Center and a transnational crime expert.
"It defused escalating Western scrutiny while aligning with Beijing's likely preference to keep a politically sensitive case out of US and UK courts."
Analysts say Chen's extradition to China will mean it is "highly unlikely" he will face justice in the US, at least in the short term. China does not have an extradition treaty with the US and the two countries are embroiled in a deepening geopolitical and economic rivalry.
"This outcome effectively shields Chen from US jurisdiction," said Sims.
The global scam industry, much of it centered in Southeast Asia, is estimated to be worth between $50 billion and $70 billion. In 2023 it conned victims in the United States alone out of at least $10 billion dollars.
The massive industry relies on hundreds of thousands of people who have been trafficked or lured to work in heavily guarded scam compounds, where they are forced to carry out investment or romance scams known as "pig butchering," to con ordinary people out of their life savings.
US prosecutors allege Chen and others operated at least 10 forced labor camps across Cambodia since 2015 to engage in cryptocurrency investment schemes under the threat of violence.
Authorities allege they laundered criminal proceeds through the business and bribed government officials to stay ahead of criminal investigations and raids on the compounds.
Prince Group, American and British authorities allege, was the umbrella for more than 100 shell companies and entities allegedly used to funnel laundered cash across 12 countries and territories from Singapore to St Kitts and Nevis.
Chen and others used the stolen money to buy Picasso artwork, private jets and properties in upscale neighborhoods of London, as well as supplying bribes to public officials, according to prosecutors in New York. — Agencies


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