@mehdirhasan How was their direct action any attempt to prevent a genocide, but in fact it was just a pure act of violence. It's bugging my mind how someone can be this stupidly delusional
@hasanthehun Cry me a river. Hasan the dog shocker Piker never contributes anything positive to society besides his racist, sexist rhetoric and disgusting online behaviors. You should be barred from entering any other country on earth as well.
@hasanthehun Hasan the dog shocker Piker is one of most racist and hated men alive going around calling everyone he disagrees with a neo-nazi. Can this guy be any more delusional than he already is
@KareemRifai He's not very bright, yet the left constantly give him stage to talk and voice his stupid opinions while reluctantly smiling and agreeing with what he says. Smh
The last money her father sent her paid for nothing.
She called him on December 26.
She said her leg hurt.
She asked for 2,200 yuan to see a doctor.
He sent it.
That same day, a relative found her photo online.
She was sitting on a sidewalk in Sihanoukville, Cambodia.
Her hair was a mess.
Her sunglasses were upside down.
She was holding an X-ray of her own body.
She could not walk.
She was 20 years old.
Her name is Umi.
She was a Douyin influencer from Fujian, China.
She had more than 20,000 followers.
She posted videos of tattoos, designer bags, and an expensive life.
Eight months earlier, someone told her there was a high-paying job in Cambodia.
She went.
She lied to her family and told them she was working in another Chinese province.
She kept calling home to ask for money.
They kept sending it.
Over time, they sent her more than 80,000 yuan.
The Chinese embassy found her in a hospital on January 3.
She tested positive for meth and ketamine.
Both of her knees were fractured.
Her legs were partly paralyzed — doctors said this happens when someone is locked in one room for too long.
She had no clear memory of where she had been kept.
Her name is Umi.
Most people will stop reading here.
This is exactly where the harder conversation should start.
Cambodia has a quiet, serious problem that English-language media rarely talks about plainly.
The country has become one of the world's biggest centers for human trafficking into online scam operations.
The United Nations estimates that at least 100,000 people are trapped inside Cambodian scam compounds.
Most were lured in with fake job offers.
Most cannot leave.
The irony is that the biggest crime groups running these compounds are Chinese.
Prince Holding Group, based in Phnom Penh, was sanctioned by the United States and the United Kingdom in October 2025 for cyber fraud and human trafficking.
Its chairman, Chen Zhi, was arrested on January 6, 2026 and extradited to China.
U.S. prosecutors also seized $15 billion in Bitcoin from his network — the largest Bitcoin seizure in the history of the Department of Justice.
The victims are also, overwhelmingly, Asian.
Chinese. Vietnamese. Thai. Filipino. Indonesian.
Young people who saw a life on a screen and tried to reach it.
Cambodia is not uniquely evil.
It is a small country that depends on Chinese investment.
Its government has been accused, again and again, of protecting the people who run these compounds.
Over the years, an entire criminal economy has grown inside its borders.
It now makes an estimated $12 to $19 billion a year.
Cambodia's legal GDP is around $47 billion.
Some analysts believe the scam industry alone may be worth up to 60 percent of that.
On April 3, Umi went live online to tell her story.
She spoke in a weak voice.
She said someone she knew had tricked her.
She said her passport was taken.
She said she had been forced into "keyboard work" — the word used inside the compounds for telecom fraud.
The stream was cut after 30 minutes.
Her account was banned soon after.
China has now set a deadline for anyone connected to Chen Zhi to turn themselves in.
Thousands of workers are reportedly leaving the compounds.
But tens of thousands are still inside.
Most have no passport.
Most have no country willing to bring them home.
Somewhere in Cambodia tonight, another 20-year-old is calling her father.
She is asking for money.
Her leg hurts.
Her name is not Umi.
No one will learn it.
@Leigha_Sapienti Hasan Piker when people play a wholesome family oriented game: ew ew disgusting
Hasan Piker when there is brothel abroad that gets accused of minor trafficking: I must go there and experience
F*ck off the dog shocker
@hasanthehun Hasan Piker when people play a wholesome family oriented game: ew ew disgusting
Hasan Piker when there is brothel abroad that gets accused of minor trafficking: I must go there and experience
F*ck off the dog shocker
@hasanthehun One thing for sure is that Kaya is terrified of you Hasan the dog shocker. In reality, you and your rabid fan base are toxic to any community you want to leech on
@hasanthehun Thank you for pointing out the obvious. We're also in the weeks where a period of 47 years is closing at well. Cope harder, Hasan the dog shocker