Collaborations with Foreign Counterparts Against Scams
Ministry of Home AffairsSpeakers
Summary
This question concerns an update requested by Mr Saktiandi Supaat regarding collaborations with foreign counterparts to combat overseas-based scams and recover scammed monies. Minister for Home Affairs Mr K Shanmugam stated that Singapore engages in international forums like ASEAN and INTERPOL to enhance cross-border enforcement and expedite asset recovery efforts. He highlighted the promotion of Singapore's Anti-Scam Command model to encourage foreign counterparts to co-locate law enforcement with banks for faster fund seizure. The Ministry is also working with other nations to collectively pressure social media and messaging platforms to implement upstream safeguards like user verification. Furthermore, Singapore actively exchanges information on evolving scam variants and strategies with international partners to better tackle this transnational scourge through multijurisdictional cooperation.
Transcript
8 Mr Saktiandi Supaat asked the Minister for Home Affairs whether an update can be provided on the planned collaborations with foreign counterparts to combat scams and recover scammed monies, especially for cases where the scammers are based overseas.
Mr K Shanmugam: The Ministry of Home Affairs has been engaging our foreign counterparts both bilaterally and in multilateral fora to cooperate in the fight against scams. These include the ASEAN Ministerial and Senior Officials Meetings on Transnational Crime, the ASEAN Senior Officials Roundtable on Cybercrime, the Global Anti-Scam Summit which took place recently in Lisbon, the Financial Action Task Force and INTERPOL.
We have three areas of interest.
First, to enhance cross-border enforcement and asset recovery. The vast majority of scams are perpetrated by scammers based outside Singapore. These scammers run sophisticated operations with extensive networks and are adept at using technology to swiftly move funds, often across jurisdictions, to evade detection by the authorities. Our ability to solve scam cases and recover scammed monies depends very much on the level of cooperation provided by overseas law enforcement agencies, as well as their ability to stop the dissipation of the monies.
In this last regard, we have been sharing with our foreign counterparts, the operational model of the Singapore Police Force's Anti-Scam Command, where law enforcement officers and bank staff are co-located. We encourage other countries to develop similar capabilities to seize funds quickly, so as to enhance our collective ability to recover scam proceeds.
Second, we want industry stakeholders to implement more upstream measures to protect their users and collaborate with law enforcement agencies. In particular, we have observed that scammers are increasingly leveraging social media platforms, such as Facebook and Instagram, and messaging apps, such as WhatsApp and Telegram, to conduct their operations. We have therefore been engaging these platforms to implement safeguards, such as implementing user verification processes to ensure that accounts are legitimate. We would like to work with other countries to collectively engage these online platforms.
Third, we continue to engage our foreign counterparts to exchange information on the latest scam variants and strategies to combat scams and learn from one another's experiences.
In short, this transnational scourge is not something we can tackle alone. We need not just the cooperation of the public and the private sector, but need to work together across jurisdictions too.