According to multiple sources, the situation in the Golden Triangle Special Zone has escalated dramatically—the entire telecommunications company has been ordered to cease operations, industrial parks have entered an "emergency pause" state, and multinational law enforcement forces are preparing for a cross-border joint crackdown on telecom fraud.
The Assistant Minister of Public Security of China has arrived in Southeast Asia and will join forces with law enforcement agencies from Laos, Vietnam, Thailand, and other countries to launch a large-scale eradication operation targeting long-standing telecom fraud gangs in the special zone.
Currently, the atmosphere inside the special zone is unprecedentedly tense:
All Chinese employees have been urgently notified to evacuate;
Foreign personnel have been arranged for "indefinite leave," and some companies have even begun to dismiss employees in advance;
The property management of the park has issued a "mandatory clearance" order, requiring the complete vacating of office buildings;
Road closures and entry checks have been upgraded, with key areas entering semi-closed management.
Insiders reveal that this operation is led by China and involves a four-nation joint anti-fraud strategy, aimed at destroying the foundation of the telecom fraud industry chain. As telecom fraud cases frequently trigger international public opinion pressure, China's stance has become increasingly firm.
The special zone is currently almost paralyzed, with logistics halted, network communications disrupted, a large number of employees trying to "run away," hotels and stations overcrowded, and intermediary agencies initiating emergency evacuation plans.
Some analysts believe that this may be the strongest "clean-up operation" since the establishment of the special zone. However, there are concerns that the black industry may shift to a more covert form and wait for an opportunity to resurge. The next few days may become a critical juncture in the fate of the telecom fraud ecosystem.