Singapore arrests sixth suspect in Cambodia scam ring tied to S$53 million
What's new: 30 suspects are still at large after Malaysian authorities handed over a 32-year-old man arrested in Perlis in March.
What's new: 30 suspects are still at large after Malaysian authorities handed over a 32-year-old man arrested in Perlis in March.
Why it matters: Authorities treated the Chinese-language posts as a threat to racial harmony and ordered YouTube, Facebook and X to disable local access.
What’s new: The arrest brings the total held to six, while 30 suspects across Singapore and Malaysia remain at large.
What's new: Most victims were approached on X, and police asked Carousell to remove resale listings as all four shows sold out.
What's new: The 14-year-old victim was taken to KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital and was reportedly hospitalized for nine days.
What's next: Open-concept massage parlours will need licenses later this year after years of exemption from the rules.
What's new: Police linked at least 48 cases since May to WhatsApp groups that steered victims to fake apps, websites and cash or gold handoffs.
What's new: A 32-year-old van driver was taken conscious to Sengkang General Hospital, and bus services 101 and 329 were briefly diverted.
What's new: Police logged at least 48 cases since May, with some victims handing over cash or gold to fake company staff.
What’s new: Police linked at least 48 cases since May to fake WhatsApp “mentors,” bogus apps and demands for cash or gold.
What's new: Police linked the losses to 48 cases since May, with some victims handing over cash or gold to fake company staff.
What's new: Police linked the losses to 48 cases since May, with some victims handing over cash or gold to impostors.
What's new: Police logged at least 48 cases since May, with some victims handing cash or gold to people posing as company staff.
What's new: Police linked 48 cases since May to fake WhatsApp “mentors” and bogus apps on Apple and Google stores.
What's new: Police linked at least 48 cases since May to fake WhatsApp investing groups and bogus apps or websites.
What's new: Police linked at least 48 cases since May to fake WhatsApp “mentors” and bogus apps or websites.