Bokeo province, Laos – Khobby was living in Dubai last year when he received an intriguing message about a well-paying job working online in a far-flung corner of Southeast Asia.
The salary was good, he was told. He would be working on computers in an office. The company would even foot the bill for his relocation to join the firm in Laos – a country of 7.6 million people nestled between China, Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam and Myanmar.
With the company paying for his flights, Khobby decided to take the plunge. But his landing in Laos was anything but smooth.
Khobby discovered that the promised dream job was rapidly becoming a nightmare when his Ghanaian passport was taken on arrival by his new employers.
With his passport confiscated and threats of physical harm ever present, he endured months working inside a compound which he could not leave.
The 21-year-old had become the latest victim of booming online cyber-scam operations in Southeast Asia – an industry that is believed to have enslaved tens of thousands of workers lured with the promise of decently paid jobs in online sales and the information technology industry.
Does the Chinese government address this in any way?
I believe Laos has large debts to China, but not sure if they are a puppet regime.
At this point I'm beginning to wonder if any regimes aren't puppet regimes, to the extraordinarily wealthy. I no longer think governments run the world, but those extraordinarily wealthy. I'm not exactly sure when this passed from subconscious to conscious thought.
Countries still hold the bulk of power. In case of America this would be the CIA. Russia and China have their policies made more openly.
Many smaller countries do nothing more than serve the interest of whomever is most financially attractive to them at that time. A good example is Pakistan which is currently wiggling between US and Chinese influence.