Cambodia passes cybercrime law targeting online scam centres

Change
Cambodia passed a cybercrime law that criminalises recruitment, money-laundering and operation of online scam networks, imposing two-to-five year prison terms and fines up to $125,000 for standard convictions and up to ten years and $250,000 for gang or mass-victim scams.
Cambodia passes cybercrime law targeting online scam centres
Why it matters
The statute creates new criminal offences that make staffing, financing and organising online scam operations legally actionable in Cambodia. Operators, recruiters and those moving illicit proceeds now face direct criminal exposure rather than relying on related charges under other laws.
Implications
  • Recruitment agencies and individual recruiters sourcing personnel for online scam operations in Cambodia must cease placements to those operations or they will be liable for criminal prosecution under the new recruitment offence.
  • Owners, managers and senior staff of alleged scam compounds in Cambodia must dismantle and cease scam activities immediately or face arrest and multi-year prison sentences and heavy fines under the new law.

Unlock the decision layer.

Go beyond headlines — see impact, exposure, and timing.

  • Implications: What actually changes downstream.
  • Who is affected: Which teams or operators are exposed.
  • What to watch: Deadlines, triggers, and next moves.
  • Real-time alerts: Know the moment a change is published.
  • Ask AI: Clarify any brief instantly, in context.

14-day free trial. Full access. No credit card required.

Start free trial
Source

The Hindu

Topics

Regulatory Actions Compliance Cybersecurity

Stay updated

Don’t check for changes.
Get them as they happen.

Get real-time alerts for executed changes, a daily briefing of what matters, and a weekly summary to stay on top — without having to check constantly.

14-day free trial. Full access. No credit card required.