A Chinese TV actor’s swift rescue from a fraud farm after going missing at the Thai-Myanmar border has reinvigorated hopes for the families of those who remain captive, as they mount fresh pressure on the authorities to do the same for their loved ones.
Wang Xing, 31, had disappeared on Jan 3 from Mae Sot, a Thai town bordering Myanmar, after travelling there for what he believed was a role in a filming project, Chinese media reported. The Chinese embassy in Thailand confirmed that he was rescued from a scam centre on Jan 7.
His speedy rescue is casting a fresh spotlight on the scourge of scam centres that have sprouted in parts of Indochina, while drawing mixed feelings from the families of others who have disappeared suddenly, frustrated by the lack of any progress in tracing their loved ones, some of whom have been missing for years.
Several private WeChat groups consisting of people who have family members believed to be trafficked have quickly emerged since Wang’s case gripped China.
In these groups and on Chinese social media platform Weibo, a crowd-sourced document with statistics on people believed to be trapped in northern and eastern Myanmar has been circulating.
By the evening on Jan 10, The Straits Times noted information about 850 missing people in the document, which began circulating on Jan 9 with more than 170 names.
Netizens in China have also pressed the authorities to provide details on the 50-plus Chinese nationals that Wang – a relatively unknown artiste before this incident – said were held captive with him.
ST reached out to China’s Ministry of Public Security, the Thai embassy in Beijing and the Thai consulate in Hong Kong for fresh comment on this story late on Jan 10.
He Sheng, who made a police report in September 2024 after his son went missing, said that he was both relieved and disappointed when he heard about Wang’s successful release from a fraud farm in Myanmar.
“I was happy that Wang Xing was safe, but also frustrated that my son remains missing until today, with no news about whether he is alive or not,” said He, who works as a ride-hailing driver in south-western Chongqing.
He said his teenage son had gone to southern Guangxi autonomous region on Aug 29, 2024, with a friend for job opportunities after he graduated from vocational training school. Their friend from school had introduced the job to them, He told ST.
But since then, he has received only one video call that lasted less than two minutes from his son in October 2024.
His son had simply told him that “all was fine” before hanging up quickly and has been uncontactable since. His friend is also missing, He said.
Local police who tracked the call said it originated from Bangkok, a lead which led He to believe that his son had been abducted and placed in a fraud farm. — The Straits Times/ANN