Pakistan police arrest 149, including 48 Chinese, in scam center raid

Police personnel patrol a market in Lahore on November 10, 2023. (AFP/File)
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Updated 10 July 2025
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Pakistan police arrest 149, including 48 Chinese, in scam center raid

  • Pakistan’s cybercrime agency says the call center was involved in Ponzi schemes and investment fraud
  • Foreign nationals, including citizens of Nigeria, the Philippines and Bangladesh, have also been arrested

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan police arrested 149 people — including 71 foreigners, mostly Chinese — in a raid on a scam call center, the National Cyber Crime Investigation Agency said Thursday.

“During the raid, a large call center was uncovered, which was involved in Ponzi schemes and investment fraud,” the agency said in a statement.

“Through this fraudulent network, the public was being deceived and vast sums of money were being illegally collected.”

The agency said they were acting on a tip-off about the network, operating in the city of Faisalabad, a manufacturing center in the east of the country.

The agency told AFP that the raid was at the residence of Tahseen Awan, the former head of the city’s power grid, who has not been arrested.

All those arrested were in custody, including 78 Pakistanis and 48 Chinese, as well as citizens from Nigeria, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Zimbabwe and Myanmar.

Some 18 of the 149 were women, it added.

A copy of the police report said victims would initially receive a small return on their first investments, before being persuaded to hand over larger sums of money.

“The charged individuals ran WhatsApp groups where they lured ordinary people by assigning small investment tasks like subscribing to different TikTok and YouTube channels,” it said.

“Later, they shifted them to Telegram links for further online tasks requiring larger investments.”


Italy to grant 10,500 work visas, waive entry requirement for Pakistani diplomats — ministry

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Italy to grant 10,500 work visas, waive entry requirement for Pakistani diplomats — ministry

  • Interior minister meets Italian counterpart to review measures preventing illegal immigration
  • Pakistan says it achieved a 47 percent drop in illegal immigration to European states in 2025

KARACHI: Italy has announced to grant 10,500 visas to Pakistani nationals to promote legal migration and exempt diplomatic passport holders from visa requirements, Pakistan’s interior ministry said on Wednesday.

The development took place during a meeting between Pakistan’s Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi and his Italian counterpart Matteo Piantedosi to review internal security relations and measures to prevent illegal immigration.

Pakistan intensified action against illegal migration in 2023 after hundreds of migrants, including many Pakistanis, drowned when an overcrowded vessel sank off the Greek town of Pylos, making it one of the deadliest boat disasters in the Mediterranean.

Authorities continue to target smuggling networks sending citizens abroad through dangerous routes, following heightened scrutiny at airports and a series of arrests involving forged documents.

“10,500 work visas will be issued for Pakistan’s skilled labor force to promote legal migration,” Piantedosi was quoted as saying by the ministry in its statement. “On the demand of Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi, Pakistani diplomatic passport holders will be exempted from Italian visas.”

The ministry said the discussions also focused on strengthening cooperation to more effectively combat drug trafficking, human smuggling and militancy.

It quoted Naqvi as saying that strict airport and sea borders surveillance had helped reduce illegal immigration.

“The achievements of Pakistani institutions in preventing human trafficking and drugs are commendable,” the ministry quoted Piantedosi as saying. “We will increase mutual cooperation to promote legal migration.”

Pakistan said last year it had achieved a 47 percent drop in illegal immigration to Europe in 2025, with more than 1,700 human smugglers arrested as part of an expanded nationwide crackdown.

The country also announced in December plans to roll out an artificial intelligence-based immigration screening system in Islamabad to detect forged travel documents and prevent illegal departures.

Pakistan’s Federal Investigation Agency released a list of more than 100 of the country’s “most wanted” human smugglers in September while identifying major hubs of trafficking activity in the country.