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BI Alerts Filipinos: Telegram, Facebook Used for Trafficking Scams
Abstract:The Bureau of Immigration alerts Filipinos about Telegram and Facebook being used by traffickers to recruit victims for online scam hubs in Southeast Asia.

The Philippines‘ Bureau of Immigration (BI) is sounding the alarm over a chilling trend: human trafficking syndicates are using social media giants like Facebook and Telegram to prey on Filipinos, luring them into online scam operations across Southeast Asia. It’s a crisis thats snagging hopeful job seekers with the promise of big paychecks, only to trap them in a web of deceit.
BI Commissioner Joel Anthony M. Viado broke the news on Sunday, announcing that 125 trafficking victims were intercepted in 2024. He highlighted the surge in “catphishing”—phony job ads on social media that lead to exploitation. “For nine years, the Philippine government has stood firm against human trafficking,” Viado declared. “Our resolve to crush these syndicates is stronger than ever.”
This comes as the Philippines celebrates nine years as a Tier 1 country in the US State Department‘s 2024 Trafficking in Persons report, a nod to its robust anti-trafficking efforts. Yet, Tier 1 status doesn’t mean the problems solved—human trafficking remains a daily struggle.

Consider the close call on March 28: four Filipinos—three men and one woman—almost flew to Malaysia after falling for fake social media job offers. Once ensnared, they were coerced into running love scams with fabricated personas. Its a gut-wrenching example of how cunning these recruiters are.
In a larger rescue, 206 Filipinos were repatriated from Myawaddy, Myanmar, earlier this year, freed from forced labor in cyber-fraud schemes. Ranging from 20 to 44 years old, many were college-educated and from Metro Manila or nearby provinces, proving no ones immune.
Traffickers disguise these scams as legitimate gigs, often posing as local business process outsourcing (BPO) jobs, before shipping victims to hotspots like Malaysia, Cambodia, Laos, or Myanmar.
Social media is their weapon of choice. Platforms like Facebook and Telegram let syndicates cast wide nets, targeting the desperate and unwary. The BI is fighting back, partnering with the Department of Justices Inter-Agency Council Against Trafficking to monitor online traps and stop victims at borders.
Its a harsh reality check: those dream jobs posted online might hide a trafficking nightmare. The battle rages on, but staying informed could be the key to saving lives.

Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
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